2 Chronicles 32:20

And for this cause Hezekiah the king, and the prophet Isaiah the son of Amoz, prayed and cried to heaven.

Cross-references

2 Chronicles 14:11 records Asa's similar prayer against a larger army — another Judahite king crying to God in crisis.

2 Chronicles 20:6-12 is Jehoshaphat's prayer against invaders — same pattern of royal prayer for deliverance from overwhelming foes.

In 2 Chronicles 6:34, Solomon prays that when Israel goes to battle and prays toward the temple, God would hear — Hezekiah's prayer here fulfills that pattern.

2 Kings 19:14-19 gives the full text of Hezekiah's prayer in the parallel account, showing his specific pleas.

Isaiah 37:14-20 is the parallel prayer of Hezekiah, recorded with more detail than the brief mention in Chronicles.

2 Kings 19:4 Historical context

2 Kings 19:4 is part of the same event — Hezekiah seeks Isaiah's intercession before praying.

2 Kings 19:15 Historical context

2 Kings 19:15 records Hezekiah's actual prayer — 2 Chron 32:20 summarizes it.

2 Kings 19:20 Historical context

2 Kings 19:20 is God's response to that prayer — showing the prayer was heard.

Isaiah 37:4 Historical context

Isaiah 37:4 records Hezekiah asking Isaiah to pray — the same prayer event described here in 2 Chronicles 32:20.

Jeremiah 26:19 Historical context

Jeremiah 26:19 recalls Hezekiah entreating the Lord and God relenting — the same pattern of intercession and deliverance seen here.

James 5:16 Parallel

James 5:16 declares the righteous prayer is powerful—the principle demonstrated by Hezekiah and Isaiah's prayer.

1 Kings 8:44 describes prayer in battle toward God's chosen place — Hezekiah's prayer fits that pattern.

Psalm 108:6 Parallel

Psalm 108:6 pleads for God to save and answer — paralleling Hezekiah and Isaiah's cry for deliverance from the Assyrian threat.

Jeremiah 27:18 calls prophets to intercede with the Lord — Hezekiah and Isaiah did exactly that in their prayer here.