1 Chronicles 22:10
He shall build an house for my name; and he shall be my son, and I will be his father; and I will establish the throne of his kingdom over Israel for ever.
Cross-references
In 1 Chronicles 28:7, David adds a condition: the kingdom is established if Solomon obeys God's commands.
1 Chronicles 28:6 repeats the promise that Solomon is chosen as God's son and will build the temple.
In 1 Chronicles 17:14, God promises to establish Solomon's throne forever — the same covenant promise.
1 Chronicles 17:13 uses the same father-son language: 'I will be his father, and he shall be my son.'
1 Chronicles 17:12 contains the identical promise that Solomon will build God's house and have an eternal throne.
In 1 Chronicles 28:5, David reiterates that God chose Solomon to sit on the throne, directly echoing the promise here.
In Hebrews 1:5, this father-son promise is quoted and applied to Christ, showing its ultimate fulfillment.
Isaiah 9:7 expands this eternal throne promise into a messianic prophecy of an everlasting kingdom under David's descendant.
In Psalm 89:37, the throne is compared to the moon as an eternal witness — reinforcing the promise of an everlasting kingdom.
In Psalm 89:36, the psalmist echoes that David's offspring and throne will endure forever like the sun.
In Psalm 89:26, the Davidic king cries 'You are my Father,' reflecting the father-son relationship promised here.
In 1 Kings 8:20, Solomon declares that God has fulfilled this promise — he built the temple and sits on the throne.
In 1 Kings 8:19, God repeats the same promise that Solomon, not David, will build the temple.
1 Kings 5:5 records Solomon citing this promise as the basis for building the temple.
2 Samuel 7:13 is the original prophecy that Solomon will build a house for God's name and have an eternal throne.
1 Kings 9:5 reiterates the eternal throne promise, conditioned on obedience — echoing this verse's covenant language.
1 Kings 8:13 records Solomon's declaration that he has built God's house — the fulfillment of the building promise.
1 Kings 6:12 repeats the conditional promise — God's word to David about Solomon's temple and dynasty.
2 Chronicles 2:1 shows Solomon deciding to build the temple, fulfilling the intent declared in this verse.
In 2 Chronicles 6:2, Solomon states he has built a house for God, completing the project promised here.
2 Chronicles 6:15 references God's promise to David about his son sitting on the throne, directly citing this verse.
Psalm 89:4 promises to establish David's seed and throne forever, a parallel covenant promise to this one.
1 Kings 2:24 has Solomon himself acknowledging God established him on the throne as promised here.
Psalm 89:29 reaffirms that David's seed will endure and his throne be eternal, matching the promise here.
In 1 Kings 2:15, Adonijah admits the kingdom was given to Solomon by the LORD, confirming this divine choice.
2 Samuel 7:11 is the original Davidic covenant promise of a house/dynasty that this verse reiterates for Solomon.
2 Samuel 12:24 records Solomon's birth — the child God loved, who would fulfill this promise to build the temple.