1 Kings 14:29
Now the rest of the acts of Rehoboam, and all that he did, are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?
Cross-reference
1 Kings 14:19 uses the same concluding formula for Jeroboam — 'the rest of the acts' written in chronicles — a literary parallel.
1 Kings 11:41 applies the same concluding formula to Solomon — 'the rest of the acts' in a book — parallel structure.
1 Kings 15:23 mirrors this formula for Asa — 'the rest of the acts' in the chronicles of the kings of Judah.
1 Kings 22:45 uses the same concluding formula for Jehoshaphat — 'the rest of the acts' in the chronicles — a consistent literary device.
1 Kings 15:7 uses the same formulaic closure for King Abijam, showing the consistent pattern of the Deuteronomistic history.
2 Chronicles 12:15 gives a parallel account of Rehoboam's acts from the Chronicler's perspective, referencing different prophetic sources.
2 Kings 8:23 applies this same formula to Joram of Israel, repeating the phrase about being written in the chronicles.
2 Kings 10:34 mirrors this formula for Jehu, adding 'all his might' but maintaining the same reference to the chronicles.
2 Kings 12:19 repeats the same formula for Joash of Judah, confirming the editorial pattern across Kings.
2 Kings 13:8 uses the same formula for Jehoahaz of Israel, again referencing the book of the chronicles.
2 Kings 14:18 applies this formula to Amaziah of Judah, continuing the standardized closure for each king's reign.
2 Kings 15:15 uses a slight variant for Shallum of Israel, but still records his acts in the chronicles.
2 Kings 16:19 repeats the formula for Ahaz of Judah, closing his reign with reference to the same chronicles.