Proverbs 14:11
The house of the wicked shall be overthrown: but the tabernacle of the upright shall flourish.
Cross-reference
Proverbs 3:33 says the LORD’s curse is on the wicked’s house and blessing on the righteous — same contrast as destruction vs flourishing.
Proverbs 12:7 declares the wicked are overthrown while the righteous stand — directly parallels the fate of houses here.
Proverbs 15:25 uses the same contrast: the LORD tears down the proud's house but maintains the widow's boundaries—mirroring the destruction of the wicked's house and flourishing of the upright's tent.
Proverbs 21:12 shows the Righteous One casting down the wicked’s house — reinforces God’s judgment on the wicked’s dwelling.
Job 18:21 explicitly sums up that the wicked's dwelling is destroyed — a direct parallel to the proverb's claim.
Job 20:26-28 describes fire and flood destroying the wicked's tent and house — echoing the proverb's destruction of the wicked's dwelling.
Job 27:13-23 details how God brings ruin on the wicked's house and tent — a fuller exposition of the proverb's theme.
Psalm 112:3 directly states wealth and riches are in the righteous person's house—reinforcing the flourishing tent of the upright in this proverb.
Zechariah 5:4 shows a curse that destroys the house of the thief and false swearer — an example of God destroying the wicked's dwelling.
Matthew 7:26 compares the foolish hearer to a house built on sand that collapses — paralleling the destruction of the wicked's house.
Matthew 7:27 describes the house falling with a great crash — reinforcing the proverb's fate of the wicked's dwelling.
Job 8:6 promises restoration of habitation for the pure and upright—echoing the flourishing tent of the upright in this proverb.
Job 8:15 describes the godless leaning on a house that does not stand — parallels the destruction of the wicked’s tent here.
In Job 18:14, Bildad depicts the wicked's tent torn down — same image of dwelling destruction as the proverb's fate of the wicked's house.
Job 18:15 adds fire and sulfur consuming the wicked's tent, reinforcing the destruction theme from the proverb.
Psalm 128:3 pictures the wife and children as fruitful within the house—a specific blessing on the household, similar to the upright's tent flourishing.