1 Chronicles 18:11
Them also king David dedicated unto the Lord, with the silver and the gold that he brought from all these nations; from Edom, and from Moab, and from the children of Ammon, and from the Philistines, and from Amalek.
Cross-reference
In 1 Chronicles 20:2, David takes plunder from Rabbah of Ammon, a specific spoil from the nations listed in 18:11.
In 1 Chronicles 26:26, the treasuries of dedicated gifts explicitly include those David dedicated from war spoils.
In 1 Chronicles 26:27, spoil from battles is the source of dedicated gifts, directly echoing David's action.
In 1 Chronicles 22:14, David's vast temple preparations include the spoils he dedicated, showing the scale.
In 1 Chronicles 26:20, Levites oversee treasuries that would store David's dedicated spoils from 18:11.
In 1 Chronicles 29:14, David acknowledges all giving comes from God, framing his dedication of spoils as returning God's own.
In Joshua 6:19, Jericho's spoils are devoted to the Lord's treasury, a precedent for David's dedication.
In 2 Samuel 8:11, the same dedication of war spoils is recorded in a parallel account.
In 2 Samuel 8:12, the parallel account lists the same nations and David's dedication of spoils from them.
In 1 Kings 7:51, Solomon brings into the temple the items David had dedicated from these nations, continuing the record.
In 2 Chronicles 5:1, Solomon brings David's dedicated items into the temple, a parallel to 1 Kings 7:51.
Numbers 31:28 prescribes a tribute to the Lord from war spoils—the same principle David follows in dedicating these articles.
Psalm 83:6 lists Edom and Moab among conspiring nations—the same enemies David subdued and plundered here.
Psalm 83:7 includes Ammon, Amalek, and Philistia—enemies also named in David's conquests here.
In Exodus 35:5, a freewill offering of gold, silver, bronze for the tabernacle parallels David's dedication of spoils for the temple.
In Exodus 35:21-24, the people's willing offerings for the tabernacle mirror David's dedication of war spoils for the temple.