1 Kings 15:14
But the high places were not removed: nevertheless Asa’s heart was perfect with the Lord all his days.
Cross-reference
1 Kings 15:3 says Abijam's heart was not perfect, directly contrasting with Asa's perfect heart here.
1 Kings 8:61 urges a perfect heart with the LORD — the very standard Asa is said to have achieved.
1 Kings 11:4 notes Solomon's heart was not perfect, contrasting with Asa's faithful heart.
1 Kings 22:43 repeats the phrase about high places not being removed, applied to Jehoshaphat.
1 Kings 3:3 mentions Solomon sacrificing in high places while loving God — a similar tension to Asa's high places and perfect heart.
2 Chronicles 25:2 says Amaziah did right but not with a perfect heart, contrasting with Asa's perfect heart.
2 Chronicles 15:17 repeats almost verbatim Asa's high places and perfect heart, confirming the same tradition.
2 Kings 18:4 shows Hezekiah removing the high places Asa left intact — a contrast in reform completeness.
2 Chronicles 14:2 gives the same assessment of Asa — he did good and right in God's eyes, parallel to the Kings account.
2 Chronicles 15:16 records Asa deposing his idolatrous mother — a specific act of fidelity complementing his general devotion.
2 Chronicles 14:3 says Asa removed high places and foreign altars, but Kings says high places remained — likely foreign vs. Lord's high places.
2 Chronicles 16:9 uses 'perfect heart' language to rebuke Asa for relying on Syria, showing a later failure.
In 2 Kings 20:3, Hezekiah's prayer of wholehearted devotion echoes Asa's described heart — both kings walked faithfully.
2 Chronicles 14:5 adds that Asa removed high places from all Judah's cities, expanding on his reforms not detailed in Kings.
In Isaiah 38:3, Hezekiah pleads his perfect heart before God, mirroring Asa's wholehearted devotion.