1 Samuel 14:23

So the Lord saved Israel that day: and the battle passed over unto Beth–aven.

Cross-reference

1 Samuel 14:45 credits Jonathan with 'this great salvation'—the same event, highlighting the human instrument through whom God saved Israel.

1 Samuel 13:5 Historical context

1 Samuel 13:5 sets up the massive Philistine army that God defeated here—direct narrative context showing the scale of the salvation.

Exodus 14:30 uses the exact phrase 'the LORD saved Israel that day'—the same divine deliverance language echoed here after Jonathan's victory.

1 Chronicles 11:14 says 'the LORD saved them with a great salvation'—nearly identical wording, reinforcing the theme of God as the rescuer in battle.

Hosea 1:7 Contrast

Hosea 1:7 promises salvation without bow or sword—contrasting with this battle where God saved through Jonathan's sword, yet both attribute victory to God.

Judges 2:18 Parallel

Judges 2:18 repeatedly describes God saving Israel from enemies through judges—a recurring pattern that this verse exemplifies.

2 Samuel 23:10 depicts God bringing a great victory through a single warrior—parallel pattern of divine deliverance in battle.

Psalm 44:6–8 Related theme

Psalm 44:6-8 celebrates God saving without trusting weapons—reflecting the same reliance on God seen in Israel's victory here.