2 Chronicles 6:33
Then hear thou from the heavens, even from thy dwelling place, and do according to all that the stranger calleth to thee for; that all people of the earth may know thy name, and fear thee, as doth thy people Israel, and may know that this house which I have built is called by thy name.
Cross-reference
In 1 Samuel 17:46, David declares God's victory will make all the earth know there is a God in Israel — the same global recognition Solomon prays for here.
Jeremiah 10:7 calls God 'King of the nations' and says all should fear Him — directly matching the prayer's hope.
In Isaiah 49:6, the Servant is given as a light to the Gentiles to bring salvation to the ends of the earth — the global mission Solomon prayed for.
In Isaiah 11:10, the prophecy that Gentiles will seek the Root of Jesse fulfills Solomon's prayer that foreigners would come to know God.
In Psalm 67:2, the psalmist prays for God's way to be known on earth among all nations — the very outcome Solomon asks for in his prayer.
In Psalm 46:10, God declares He will be exalted among the nations — the universal recognition Solomon seeks for the temple.
In Psalm 22:27, the psalmist prophesies all nations turning to the Lord, fulfilling Solomon's prayer that all peoples may know God's name.
In 2 Kings 19:19, Hezekiah prays for deliverance so that all kingdoms may know the Lord — echoing the same global purpose as Solomon's prayer.
1 Kings 8:43 is the parallel account of this same prayer — identical wording about foreigners and God's name.
Jeremiah 7:11 echoes 'called by my name' but in judgment — the temple becomes a den of robbers, not a house of prayer for nations.
Joshua 9:9 shows foreigners (Gibeonites) coming because of God's name — an early example of this prayer's request.
Zechariah 8:23 depicts foreigners from all nations seeking God's presence with Israel — fulfillment of the prayer that all peoples know God's name.
Acts 10:4 records the angel telling Cornelius his prayers have ascended to God, directly fulfilling Solomon's plea that God would hear foreigners.
Acts 8:27 shows the Ethiopian eunuch, a foreigner who came to worship, exemplifying the kind of foreigner Solomon asked God to hear.
Acts 10:2 introduces Cornelius, a devout Gentile who prayed, illustrating a foreigner's prayer being heard as Solomon requested.
Revelation 11:15 declares the world's kingdoms become Christ's — the ultimate answer to the prayer that all nations know God's name.
In Psalm 138:4, all kings praise God — a specific embodiment of Solomon's desire that all peoples know and fear Him.