2 Chronicles 7:3
And when all the children of Israel saw how the fire came down, and the glory of the Lord upon the house, they bowed themselves with their faces to the ground upon the pavement, and worshipped, and praised the Lord, saying, For he is good; for his mercy endureth for ever.
Cross-reference
2 Chronicles 5:13 records the same refrain 'For he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever' sung by musicians at the temple dedication.
2 Chronicles 20:21 has Jehoshaphat's army singing the refrain 'Give thanks to the LORD, for his steadfast love endures forever' before battle.
In 2 Chronicles 20:18, Jehoshaphat and all Judah fall down with faces to the ground before the Lord, mirroring this worship response to God's glory.
Leviticus 9:24 describes a similar divine fire and the people falling on their faces in awe, paralleling the temple dedication event.
1 Kings 18:39 records the people falling on their faces after Elijah's fire, crying 'The LORD, he is God'—a strong parallel of fire and prostration.
1 Chronicles 16:41 names musicians appointed to give thanks with the refrain 'for his steadfast love endures forever'—the same phrase used here.
Ezra 3:11 records the people singing the same refrain at the temple foundation laying, echoing the response at the dedication.
Psalm 136:1-26 repeats the exact refrain 'his steadfast love endures forever' after every verse, echoing the worship here.
Jeremiah 33:11 directly quotes the same thanksgiving refrain: 'Give thanks... for his steadfast love endures forever.'
1 Chronicles 16:34 contains the identical refrain 'give thanks... for his steadfast love endures forever,' from David's psalm of thanksgiving.
In Isaiah 64:11, the temple is burned and ruined, starkly contrasting with the glorious dedication and worship seen here.
In Revelation 4:10, the twenty-four elders fall down and worship before God's throne, similar to the people's response here to the glory of the Lord.