2 Chronicles 4:16
The pots also, and the shovels, and the fleshhooks, and all their instruments, did Huram his father make to king Solomon for the house of the Lord of bright brass.
Cross-reference
2 Chronicles 2:13 identifies Huram-abi as the skilled craftsman sent by Hiram, who made these bronze items.
1 Kings 7:13 introduces Hiram the craftsman who made these utensils — the same person named here.
1 Kings 7:14 describes Hiram's skill and background — the same craftsman's credentials.
1 Kings 7:45 nearly repeats this verse verbatim — the same list of Hiram's bronze vessels.
1 Chronicles 28:17 lists fleshhooks among David's plans for the temple — a parallel preparation account.
Jeremiah 52:18 records how these same bronze vessels were carried off by the Babylonians during the temple's destruction.
Exodus 27:3 lists the same bronze utensils — pots, shovels, and fleshhooks — for the tabernacle altar, prefiguring the temple implements here.
Exodus 38:3 records Bezalel making these same utensils for the tabernacle — a parallel construction account.
Zechariah 14:21 extends that holiness to every pot in Jerusalem — a broader eschatological vision for the same items.
1 Samuel 2:13 describes corrupt priests using a fleshhook to take meat — contrasting the proper temple use here with abuse.
1 Samuel 2:14 continues the same corrupt practice with the fleshhook — further contrast to the holy utensils here.
Zechariah 14:20 prophesies that the temple pots will become holy like the bowls before the altar — elevating these common utensils.