1 Chronicles 23:4
Of which, twenty and four thousand were to set forward the work of the house of the Lord; and six thousand were officers and judges:
Cross-reference
1 Chronicles 23:28-32 specifies the duties of the 24,000 Levites who oversee temple work, elaborating on the assignment here.
1 Chronicles 26:20-27 describes Levites in charge of treasuries, a specific part of the 24,000 temple overseers mentioned here.
1 Chronicles 26:29-31 expands on the officers and judges role, detailing Levites assigned to external duties for Israel.
1 Chronicles 9:28-32 lists post-exilic Levite duties (utensils, furnishings) similar to the temple roles assigned here.
1 Chronicles 6:48 summarizes all Levites being appointed for tabernacle service, paralleling the temple service assignment here.
2 Chronicles 19:8 shows Jehoshaphat appointing Levites as judges in Jerusalem, a later echo of the same judicial role from 23:4.
2 Chronicles 34:13 describes Levites supervising temple work, directly corresponding to the 'charge of the work of the temple' in 23:4.
Ezra 7:25 appoints magistrates and judges for the restored community, reviving the Levitical judicial role first seen in 23:4.
Deuteronomy 17:8-10 assigns Levitical priests to judge difficult cases, matching the judicial function of officers in 23:4.
Ezekiel 44:24 echoes the same duty for Levites as judges, confirming their judicial role in temple administration.
Deuteronomy 16:18 appoints judges and officers in towns, paralleling the civil judicial role also given to Levites in 23:4.