1 Kings 4:24

For he had dominion over all the region on this side the river, from Tiphsah even to Azzah, over all the kings on this side the river: and he had peace on all sides round about him.

Cross-reference

1 Kings 4:21 similarly describes Solomon's reign from the river to Philistine land, reinforcing the extent of his peaceful rule.

1 Kings 5:4 Historical context

1 Kings 5:4 has Solomon telling Hiram that God gave him rest on every side, matching the peace mentioned in 4:24.

1 Chronicles 22:9 Prophetic fulfillment

1 Chronicles 22:9 records God's promise that Solomon would have rest from enemies, fulfilled in 1 Kings 4:24's description of peace.

Psalm 72:7 Parallel

Psalm 72:7 describes peace and righteousness flourishing under the king—the same ideal pictured in Solomon's peaceful dominion.

Psalm 72:8 Allusion

Psalm 72:8 envisions a king with dominion from sea to sea, echoing Solomon's kingdom and pointing to the Messiah's universal reign.

Psalm 72:11 Allusion

Psalm 72:11 says all kings shall serve him, paralleling Solomon's dominion over kings and prefiguring Christ's universal kingship.

Isaiah 9:7 Typology

Isaiah 9:7 prophecies endless peace for the Messiah's reign—Solomon's temporary peace typologically prefigures this.

Exodus 23:31 Prophetic fulfillment

Exodus 23:31 gives the land promise from the Red Sea to the Euphrates—fulfilled in Solomon's dominion described here.

Deuteronomy 11:24 Prophetic fulfillment

Deuteronomy 11:24 promises Israel territory from the Euphrates to the Mediterranean—Solomon's reign fulfills this boundary promise.

In 2 Chronicles 9:26, Solomon's dominion from the River to Philistia is almost verbatim repeated — a direct parallel account.

Deuteronomy 15:6 Prophetic fulfillment

Deuteronomy 15:6 promises Israel will rule over many nations—Solomon's dominion over kings is a direct realization of this.

In 2 Kings 15:16, the same city Tiphsah that marked Solomon's peaceful dominion is violently attacked by Menahem — a stark contrast.

Ezra 4:16 Contrast

In Ezra 4:16, the same 'beyond the River' region appears, but now the Persians fear losing control — contrasting Solomon's secure rule.

Ezra 4:20 Allusion

In Ezra 4:20, former kings are said to have ruled 'beyond the River' — a direct echo of Solomon's dominion described here.

Daniel 2:37 Parallel

In Daniel 2:37, Nebuchadnezzar is called 'king of kings' with a God-given kingdom — paralleling Solomon's dominion over other kings.