1 Chronicles 28:6
And he said unto me, Solomon thy son, he shall build my house and my courts: for I have chosen him to be my son, and I will be his father.
Cross-reference
In 1 Chronicles 28:10, David repeats God's commission to Solomon — a direct application of the divine choice and command.
1 Chronicles 22:10 explicitly states Solomon will be God's son and build the temple, matching the promise here verbatim.
1 Chronicles 17:11-14 is the original promise that David's son would build the temple and be God's son, which Solomon recalls here.
In 1 Chronicles 29:1, David publicly acknowledges that Solomon is the one God chose — reinforcing the divine selection already declared in 28:6.
In 1 Chronicles 17:12, God tells David that Solomon will build His house — the same promise repeated here.
In 1 Chronicles 14:4, Solomon is named among David's sons born in Jerusalem — the son chosen here.
In 1 Chronicles 3:5, Solomon is listed among David's sons — the son God chose here to build the temple.
2 Samuel 7:14 declares the father-son relationship between God and Solomon, directly quoted in this verse.
2 Chronicles 1:9 has Solomon praying for the fulfillment of this same promise, showing its ongoing importance.
2 Samuel 7:13 is the foundational promise that Solomon would build the temple, which this verse reiterates.
In 1 Kings 8:20, Solomon confirms God kept His promise — he sits on the throne and built the temple as foretold.
In 1 Kings 8:19, Solomon quotes God's word that his son would build the temple — the same promise from 1 Chronicles 28:6.
In 1 Kings 8:13, Solomon declares the temple built — fulfilling God's promise in 1 Chronicles 28:6 that he would build it.
In 1 Kings 5:5, Solomon explicitly recalls God's promise that his son would build the temple — the same promise given here.
In 2 Samuel 12:24, Solomon's birth and God's love for him are recorded — the foundation for God choosing him here.
In 2 Chronicles 6:2, Solomon declares that he has built the temple — fulfilling God's promise in 28:6 that Solomon would build His house.
In Hebrews 1:5, the same father-son language from God's promise to David (about Solomon) is applied to Christ — showing Christ as the ultimate Son.
In 1 Kings 1:20, Bathsheba highlights uncertainty over David's successor — contrasting with God's clear choice of Solomon here.