2 Chronicles 7:17

And as for thee, if thou wilt walk before me, as David thy father walked, and do according to all that I have commanded thee, and shalt observe my statutes and my judgments;

Cross-reference

2 Chronicles 33:8 echoes the same conditional promise of blessing if the people obey God's commands, similar to the condition here.

2 Chronicles 11:17 Historical context

2 Chronicles 11:17 shows Rehoboam initially walking in the way of David and Solomon, partially fulfilling the condition for obedience.

In 1 Kings 11:38, the same conditional promise is made to Jeroboam: obedience like David leads to a sure house, mirroring the covenant with Solomon here.

John 15:10 Parallel

In John 15:10, Jesus says keeping His commandments leads to abiding in His love — directly paralleling the conditional obedience and blessing here.

In 1 Chronicles 28:9, David charges Solomon to serve God wholeheartedly — the same condition for blessing that God reiterates here to Solomon.

1 Kings 9:4 Parallel

1 Kings 9:4 repeats God's condition to Solomon: walk before me as David did — almost verbatim to this verse.

1 Kings 3:14 contains God's promise to lengthen days if Solomon walks in His ways — nearly identical to this condition.

1 Kings 2:3 Parallel

1 Kings 2:3 records David's charge to Solomon to walk in God's ways — the same condition God now gives.

In 1 Kings 6:12, God gives Solomon the same conditional promise during temple construction — the direct parallel to the covenant restated here.

1 Kings 11:10 records Solomon's disobedience, breaking the condition of walking before God as David did, thus forfeiting the promise.

Psalm 89:30 Parallel

Psalm 89:30 applies the same condition to David's children: 'If they forsake my law and do not walk according to my rules.'

In Ezekiel 36:27, God promises to cause His people to walk in His statutes — contrasting the condition here with the New Covenant enablement to obey.

In Deuteronomy 4:40, the same principle of obedience leading to blessing and long life in the land is given to all Israel — the background of God's covenant conditions.

Deuteronomy 28:1-14 outlines blessings for obedience — the same covenantal principle applied to Solomon here.

In Deuteronomy 12:28, Moses commands obedience to all God's words for well-being — the same covenant principle applied to Solomon here.

In Zechariah 3:7, God uses the same 'walk in my ways and keep my charge' condition for Joshua the high priest, promising him authority in God's house.

John 14:21 Parallel

In John 14:21, Jesus ties keeping His commandments to loving Him and receiving His love — a New Testament parallel to the obedience-blessing pattern here.