1 Samuel 7:9
And Samuel took a sucking lamb, and offered it for a burnt offering wholly unto the Lord: and Samuel cried unto the Lord for Israel; and the Lord heard him.
Cross-reference
In 1 Samuel 12:17, Samuel again calls on the Lord and receives a sign — the same pattern of prophetic intercession and divine response.
In 1 Samuel 10:8, Samuel instructs Saul that he will come to offer burnt offerings—continuing the pattern of his sacrificial intercession seen in 7:9.
In 1 Kings 18:30-38, Elijah rebuilds an altar, offers a burnt sacrifice, and cries out—mirroring Samuel's bold intercession and God's powerful answer.
Psalm 99:6 explicitly recalls Samuel as one who called on the Lord and was answered—a direct poetic reference to the event in 7:9.
Jeremiah 15:1 mentions Samuel as a powerful intercessor, but God says even his prayer would not save this people—contrasting with his successful plea in 7:9.
In 2 Samuel 24:25, David offers burnt offerings and God responds to his plea — mirroring Samuel's offering and answered prayer.
In 1 Chronicles 21:26, David offers burnt offerings and calls on the Lord, who answers with fire — a very close parallel to Samuel's offering and divine response.
In Judges 6:26, Gideon is told to offer a burnt offering on a rebuilt altar—similar to Samuel's act, both seeking God's intervention for deliverance.
James 5:16 declares that the prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective—Samuel's cried-out prayer in 7:9 perfectly exemplifies this principle.