1 Chronicles 26:26

Which Shelomith and his brethren were over all the treasures of the dedicated things, which David the king, and the chief fathers, the captains over thousands and hundreds, and the captains of the host, had dedicated.

Cross-reference

1 Chronicles 26:20 directly parallels this verse: both describe Levites in charge of treasuries of dedicated gifts.

1 Chronicles 18:11 Historical context

1 Chronicles 18:11 details the spoils David dedicated from conquered nations, which are the dedicated things.

1 Chronicles 29:2–5 Historical context

1 Chronicles 29:2-5 records David's personal offerings for the temple, among the dedicated treasures overseen here.

1 Chronicles 28:12 Historical context

1 Chronicles 28:12 includes these treasuries in David's temple plan — showing the dedicated gifts were part of the original design.

1 Chronicles 22:14 Historical context

1 Chronicles 22:14 describes David's preparation of vast materials for the temple, part of the dedicated treasures.

In Numbers 31:30-52, the commanders dedicate gold from Midianite spoils to the Lord — the same type of dedicated treasures David's leaders gave.

Joshua 6:19 Parallel

Joshua 6:19 shows Jericho's precious metals consecrated to the Lord's treasury — a precedent for the dedicated spoils David's commanders brought.

2 Samuel 8:11 Historical context

2 Samuel 8:11 records David dedicating spoils from conquered nations — directly the source of many treasures Shelomith later oversaw.

1 Kings 7:51 Historical context

1 Kings 7:51 notes Solomon placing David's dedicated items in the temple treasury — the same items Shelomith was in charge of.

2 Kings 11:10 Historical context

2 Kings 11:10 says Jehoiada gave out David's spears and shields from the temple — these were among the dedicated items in the treasury.

2 Chronicles 5:1 Historical context

2 Chronicles 5:1 records Solomon bringing in the dedicated things from David — the fulfillment of what is stored here.

1 Kings 15:15 describes Asa bringing his and his father's dedicated offerings into the temple — a later example of the practice seen here.