1 Chronicles 5:20
And they were helped against them, and the Hagarites were delivered into their hand, and all that were with them: for they cried to God in the battle, and he was intreated of them; because they put their trust in him.
Cross-references
Verse 22 continues the account: many fell slain because the battle was the Lord's, showing the answered prayer from verse 20.
1 Chronicles 5:10 recounts an earlier defeat of the Hagrites by these same tribes — providing background to their later victory through trust.
Nahum 1:7 calls God a stronghold who knows those who take refuge in Him — mirroring the refuge they found when they cried out.
Joshua 10:14 reports the Lord listening to a human voice in battle — echoing how God answered their prayer here.
Jeremiah 17:7 pronounces blessing on those who trust in the LORD — the same trust that led to victory for the tribes here.
Psalm 22:5 explicitly says they cried to God, trusted, and were not confounded — identical to the tribes' experience.
Psalm 22:4 recalls how the fathers trusted God and were delivered — the same pattern of trust and deliverance seen here.
Psalm 20:7 contrasts trust in horses and chariots with trust in God's name — echoing the tribes' reliance on God alone.
Psalm 9:10 affirms that those who know God's name trust Him and are not forsaken — the same trust that brought deliverance here.
2 Chronicles 32:21 tells of God sending an angel to destroy the Assyrian army — the divine response to the cry, matching the deliverance here.
2 Chronicles 32:20 records Hezekiah and Isaiah crying out in prayer to heaven about the Assyrian siege — a direct parallel to crying out in crisis.
2 Chronicles 14:11-13 has Asa crying out to God for help against a vast army, and God defeats the enemy — a clear parallel to the trust and deliverance here.
2 Chronicles 13:15 records God striking down the enemy after Judah's battle cry — the same divine intervention in response to a cry as seen here.
2 Chronicles 13:14 shows Judah crying out to the Lord when surrounded in battle — the same action of crying out for help that God answered here.
In Ezra 8:23, God similarly listens to fasting and prayer for protection — echoing the same pattern of crying out and being heard.
2 Chronicles 16:7 rebukes Asa for relying on Syria instead of God — contrasting the positive trust that brought victory here.
2 Chronicles 13:18 states Judah prevailed because they relied on the LORD — a direct parallel to the tribes' reliance and victory here.
Psalm 37:40 states the Lord delivers those who take refuge in Him — directly matching the deliverance granted because they trusted in Him.
Psalm 83:6 lists the Hagrites among Israel's enemies — the same people group defeated here when God answered their cry.
Proverbs 29:25 contrasts fear of man with trust in the Lord for safety — the battle victory here exemplifies trust overcoming fear.
2 Chronicles 33:13 shows God hearing Manasseh's prayer and restoring him — analogous to God answering the tribes' cry for help.
2 Chronicles 20:12 shows Jehoshaphat praying before battle, expressing dependence on God — a cry for help similar to the one here, though before the fight.