2 Chronicles 13:18
Thus the children of Israel were brought under at that time, and the children of Judah prevailed, because they relied upon the Lord God of their fathers.
Cross-references
2 Chronicles 16:8 recounts Asa's victory when he relied on God — the same principle of reliance leading to deliverance as here.
2 Chronicles 16:9 rebukes Asa for not relying on God, contrasting with this verse where reliance brings victory — opposite outcomes.
2 Chronicles 20:20 calls for belief in God to be established — this verse shows that reliance on God led to prevailing in battle.
In 2 Chronicles 14:11, Asa's prayer mirrors this reliance on God in battle, showing the same principle at work.
2 Chronicles 16:7 contrasts this reliance by rebuking Asa for trusting human allies instead of God, highlighting the opposite outcome.
2 Kings 18:5 praises Hezekiah's trust in God — a parallel example of reliance on God bringing success, though here it's collective.
In 1 Chronicles 5:20, the same pattern appears: trust in God brings victory in battle, with explicit mention of crying to God and being helped.
Psalm 22:4 recalls that our fathers trusted and were delivered, directly echoing the reliance on God that gave victory here.
Psalm 22:5 adds that those who trusted were not confounded, reinforcing the outcome of reliance on God as seen here.
Daniel 3:28 shows God delivering those who trusted in Him, a clear parallel to the reliance on God that brought victory here.
Psalm 146:5 pronounces blessing on those whose hope is in the LORD, the same trust that led to Judah's victory.
Nahum 1:7 states the LORD knows those who trust Him, offering a general principle that underlies the victory here.