1 Kings 3:15
And Solomon awoke; and, behold, it was a dream. And he came to Jerusalem, and stood before the ark of the covenant of the Lord, and offered up burnt offerings, and offered peace offerings, and made a feast to all his servants.
Cross-reference
1 Kings 8:63 describes Solomon's even larger peace offering at the temple dedication, showing a pattern of sacrificial devotion.
1 Kings 8:65 also mentions a feast after sacrifices, mirroring the feast Solomon made for his servants here.
1 Kings 8:1 mentions the ark of the covenant being brought up—a later event showing Solomon's ongoing connection to the ark he stood before here.
In 2 Samuel 6:17, David also brings the ark, offers burnt and peace offerings, and makes a feast — Solomon repeats his father's pattern.
2 Samuel 6:18 shows David offering burnt and peace offerings after bringing the ark—a parallel pattern of worship by a king after a divine encounter.
2 Samuel 6:19 has David distributing food to the people, just as Solomon makes a feast for his servants—both kings celebrate with a meal after worship.
1 Chronicles 16:1 recounts David bringing the ark and offering sacrifices, paralleling Solomon's actions at Gibeon with the same sacrificial terms.
1 Chronicles 16:2 continues David's example of offering sacrifices and blessing the people, which Solomon later echoes.
Leviticus 3:1-17 provides the laws for peace offerings, the type of sacrifice Solomon offered — it explains the ritual background.
2 Chronicles 7:5 records Solomon's massive sacrifice at the temple dedication, echoing his earlier pattern of generous offerings after a divine encounter.
2 Chronicles 7:7-10 describes Solomon's dedication feast with sacrifices and a seven-day celebration, mirroring the feast he holds here after receiving wisdom.
Leviticus 7:11-21 details further regulations for peace offerings, which Solomon's offering would have followed.
2 Chronicles 30:22-26 portrays Hezekiah's joyful Passover feast after sacrifices—a later king following the same pattern of worship and celebration.
Genesis 31:54 shows Jacob sacrificing and then eating bread with his kinsmen—a patriarch's example of worship followed by a communal meal.