1 Chronicles 29:14
But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort? for all things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee.
Cross-reference
In 1 Chronicles 29:9, the people's joyful willing offering sets the context — their generosity flows from the same heart David marvels at in v14.
1 Chronicles 29:16 continues David's prayer, reiterating that all abundance for the temple is from God's hand.
1 Chronicles 18:11 shows David dedicating war spoils to the Lord — another example of giving back from God's provision.
In Daniel 4:30, Nebuchadnezzar boasts in his own achievement, contrasting sharply with David's confession that all things come from God.
In Revelation 4:10, elders cast crowns before the throne — a direct enactment of David's principle: all honor and gifts belong to God and are simply returned to Him.
James 1:17 declares every good gift comes from God — directly reinforcing David's confession that all we give was first from Him.
Philippians 2:13 affirms that even the willingness to give is God's work — matching David's wonder that God enabled such a willing offering.
In 2 Corinthians 3:5, Paul says our sufficiency is from God, directly paralleling David's statement that all things come from God.
In 1 Corinthians 15:10, Paul attributes his labor to God's grace, just as David here says all giving is from God.
Romans 11:36 ascribes all things to God as source, sustainer, and goal — perfectly aligning with David's confession of total dependence.
In Genesis 32:10, Jacob humbly declares unworthiness before God, mirroring David's 'Who am I?' — both express humility.
In Psalm 115:1, the psalmist declares glory belongs to God alone, echoing David's 'of thine own have we given thee'.
Psalm 50:10-12 proclaims God's ownership of all creation — the very truth David humbly acknowledges when he says 'all things come from You'.
In 2 Samuel 7:18, David uses the exact same rhetorical question 'Who am I?' in a similar prayer of humility.
Job 35:7 reinforces that God gains nothing from human actions — mirroring David's declaration that we only give back what is already God's.
Haggai 2:8 directly states that all silver and gold belong to God — exactly matching 'all things come from You' in David's prayer.
Luke 16:12 teaches stewardship of what belongs to another — directly paralleling David's point that we only manage God's resources.
2 Chronicles 2:6 echoes David's humility—Solomon asks 'who am I' to build a temple, mirroring David's question.
In 1 Corinthians 6:19, Paul applies the same divine ownership to our bodies — we belong to God, not ourselves.
Deuteronomy 26:10 presents bringing firstfruits as acknowledging God's gift — mirroring David's confession that all we give is from God.
In Ephesians 3:8, Paul expresses similar humility to David's 'who am I' — both see themselves as unworthy of God's grace.
Exodus 35:29 records Israel's willing offerings for the tabernacle — the same spirit of generous giving David acknowledges here.
Exodus 35:21 shows the people responding with willing hearts to give for the tabernacle — mirroring the joyful generosity in 1 Chronicles 29.
Exodus 25:2 calls for freewill offerings from willing hearts for the tabernacle — the same spirit that moved David's people to give for the temple.
Luke 17:10 calls servants 'unprofitable' after doing their duty — echoing David's humility that all we offer is merely giving back to God.
Acts 4:34 describes believers selling possessions to share — a practical outworking of recognizing that all they have belongs to God.
In 1 Corinthians 15:9, Paul calls himself the least of apostles, feeling unworthy — a parallel to David's sense of unworthiness to offer.