2 Chronicles 14:4
And commanded Judah to seek the Lord God of their fathers, and to do the law and the commandment.
Cross-references
2 Chronicles 11:16 describes those who set their hearts to seek the LORD, directly mirroring Asa's command to seek God.
2 Chronicles 30:19 mentions setting one's heart to seek God, the exact phrase echoing Asa's command.
In 2 Chronicles 33:16, Manasseh repents and commands Judah to serve the Lord, directly echoing Asa's own command.
In 2 Chronicles 34:33, Josiah makes all Israel serve the Lord, matching Asa's command for Judah to seek God.
In 2 Chronicles 30:12, God gives unity to obey Hezekiah's reform command, mirroring divine enablement for Asa's decree.
In Joshua 24:15, Joshua declares his household will serve the Lord, a parallel personal commitment to the duty Asa commands nationally.
In 1 Samuel 3:13, Eli fails to restrain his sons from blasphemy — a contrast to Asa's active command to keep the law.
Nehemiah 10:29-39 records a covenant oath to follow God's law, fulfilling Asa's command to keep the law.
Psalm 119:10 says 'With my whole heart I seek you; let me not wander from your commandments', perfectly matching Asa's dual command.
Isaiah 55:6 directly commands 'Seek the LORD while he may be found', reinforcing Asa's call to seek God.
Amos 5:4 commands 'Seek me and live', a direct parallel to Asa's command to seek the LORD.
Nehemiah 13:19-22 enforces Sabbath observance, a key aspect of keeping the law as Asa commanded.
In Genesis 18:19, Abraham is chosen to command his household to keep the Lord's way — a parallel patriarchal charge to obey.