1 Kings 8:15
And he said, Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, which spake with his mouth unto David my father, and hath with his hand fulfilled it, saying,
Cross-reference
1 Kings 8:20 elaborates on the same fulfillment—Solomon confirms he sits on David's throne as promised, directly expanding verse 15.
1 Kings 8:24 repeats the key phrase 'spoke with mouth, fulfilled with hand' from verse 15, reinforcing God's faithfulness in the same prayer.
1 Kings 8:56 echoes the blessing, praising God that not one promise has failed—a summary of the same theme earlier in the dedication.
1 Kings 9:5 records God's response, reaffirming the promise to David that Solomon referenced—divine confirmation of the same covenant.
Joshua 21:45 celebrates that not one good promise of God failed — directly reinforcing the same truth about God's faithfulness.
2 Samuel 7:25 is David's prayer that God confirm His word—directly connected to the promise Solomon declares fulfilled.
2 Samuel 7:28 affirms God's truthfulness and the promise—echoing the same covenantal faithfulness Solomon praises.
1 Chronicles 17:12 records the divine promise to David that Solomon references here — God's pledge that David's son would build His temple.
In 1 Chronicles 29:10, David blesses God with nearly identical words, showing a consistent royal praise tradition.
In 2 Chronicles 6:4, the same speech is recorded verbatim in the parallel account of the temple dedication.
Luke 1:68 quotes the exact phrase 'Blessed be the Lord God of Israel,' applying it to God's visitation in Christ—a direct verbal parallel.
2 Samuel 7:5 records God's initial response to David's temple plan—the beginning of the promise Solomon sees fulfilled.
In 1 Chronicles 29:20, David calls the assembly to bless God, shifting from Solomon's personal blessing to communal action.
Luke 1:72 continues the theme of God remembering His covenant promises—here to Abraham, as Solomon praised fulfillment to David.