2 Chronicles 9:29

Now the rest of the acts of Solomon, first and last, are they not written in the book of Nathan the prophet, and in the prophecy of Ahijah the Shilonite, and in the visions of Iddo the seer against Jeroboam the son of Nebat?

Cross-reference

2 Chronicles 13:22 cites Iddo's story for Abijah, another reference to the same seer's writings.

2 Chronicles 12:15 cites Iddo's chronicles for Rehoboam, parallel to the main verse citing Iddo for Solomon.

2 Chronicles 10:15 Prophetic fulfillment

2 Chronicles 10:15 shows the turn of events fulfilling Ahijah's prophecy to Jeroboam, mentioned here.

2 Chronicles 26:22 similarly cites Isaiah's writings for Uzziah, paralleling the source reference pattern.

2 Chronicles 24:27 also cites the Story of the Book of the Kings for Joash, mirroring the source formula here.

2 Chronicles 16:11 uses the same source citation formula for Asa's reign — a recurring pattern in Chronicles.

1 Kings 11:41-43 gives the parallel summary of Solomon's reign and death, referencing different source materials.

1 Chronicles 29:29 also cites Nathan's chronicles for David's acts, confirming Nathan as a source for royal histories.

1 Kings 14:2 Historical context

1 Kings 14:2 has Jeroboam sending his wife to Ahijah, referencing the earlier prophecy — part of the same prophetic record.

1 Kings 11:29 Historical context

1 Kings 11:29 shows Ahijah meeting Jeroboam, fulfilling the 'prophecy of Ahijah' referenced in the main verse.

1 Kings 1:32–38 Historical context

1 Kings 1:32-38 describes Nathan anointing Solomon as king, directly from the prophetic source referenced here.

1 Kings 1:22–27 Historical context

1 Kings 1:22-27 recounts Nathan confronting David about Adonijah's claim, a key episode in Nathan's history of Solomon.

1 Kings 1:11 Historical context

1 Kings 1:11 has Nathan speaking to Bathsheba, initiating the plan to secure Solomon's throne — an event from Nathan's prophetic record.

1 Kings 1:10 Historical context

1 Kings 1:10 notes Nathan was not invited to Adonijah's feast, continuing the account of Nathan's involvement in Solomon's rise.

1 Kings 1:8 Historical context

1 Kings 1:8 lists Nathan among those not with Adonijah, showing his loyalty to David and Solomon — part of the history Nathan wrote.

2 Samuel 7:1–3 Historical context

2 Samuel 7:1-3 records Nathan's prophecy to David about the temple—Nathan is named here as a source for Solomon's history.

2 Samuel 12:25 Historical context

Same cross-reference as pair 9—2 Samuel 12:1 again illustrates Nathan's role as a prophet, reinforcing the source citation.

2 Samuel 12:1 Historical context

2 Samuel 12:1 contains Nathan's parable to David, another key event involving the prophet cited as a source here.