2 Chronicles 7:13
If I shut up heaven that there be no rain, or if I command the locusts to devour the land, or if I send pestilence among my people;
Cross-reference
In 2 Chronicles 6:26-28, Solomon’s prayer lists the same judgments (drought, locusts, plague) that God here responds to directly — a parallel within the same temple dedication narrative.
Exodus 10:4-6 records the locust plague on Egypt—the same divine judgment referenced here as a possibility for Israel's disobedience.
Numbers 14:12 records God's threat to strike Israel with pestilence for rebellion—the same judgment listed here as a covenant consequence.
Deuteronomy 11:17 warns that God will shut up the heavens for disobedience — the identical covenant curse that 2 Chronicles 7:13 applies as a conditional judgment.
2 Samuel 24:13-15 records pestilence sent as judgment on Israel—a concrete example of the judgment listed here.
Psalm 105:34 poetically recounts the locust plague in Egypt—echoing the same judgment warned of here for covenant unfaithfulness.
Ezekiel 14:19-21 includes pestilence among God's four severe judgments—echoing the pestilence mentioned here as a covenant curse.
Joel 1:4-7 describes a locust plague as divine judgment on Judah—illustrating the kind of devastation warned of here.
Revelation 11:6 gives the two witnesses power to shut the sky so no rain falls — a direct parallel to the divine judgment described in 2 Chronicles 7:13.
In Amos 4:7, God withholds rain as judgment in a localized pattern, illustrating the same kind of discipline mentioned here.
Luke 4:25 recalls Elijah’s drought when the sky was shut up — a historical example of the same kind of judgment God threatens in 2 Chronicles 7:13.
Joel 2:25 promises restoration after locust judgment—showing that the same God who sends judgment also offers healing.
In Zechariah 14:17, lack of rain is a curse for failing to worship — a future parallel to the judgment of drought here.