2 Kings 19:15
And Hezekiah prayed before the Lord, and said, O Lord God of Israel, which dwellest between the cherubims, thou art the God, even thou alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth; thou hast made heaven and earth.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 18:5 highlights Hezekiah's unmatched trust in God, which underlies his confident prayer here.
2 Chronicles 20:6 records Jehoshaphat's prayer: 'You rule over all the kingdoms'—identical confession to Hezekiah's here.
Isaiah 44:8 asks 'Is there a God besides me?' strengthening Hezekiah's assertion of God's exclusive sovereignty as creator.
Isaiah 44:6 states 'besides me there is no god,' directly paralleling Hezekiah's confession that God alone rules all kingdoms.
Isaiah 43:10 declares 'before me no god was formed,' reinforcing Hezekiah's claim that God alone is God over all the earth.
Isaiah 45:22 calls 'Turn to me... for I am God, and there is no other,' echoing Hezekiah's prayer that God alone is God over all.
Psalm 146:6 likewise declares God made heaven, earth, and sea — reinforcing the creator identity Hezekiah invokes.
Psalm 102:25 echoes 'you have made heaven and earth' — the heavens are the work of God's hands, just as Hezekiah prays.
Psalm 99:1 also describes God as 'enthroned upon the cherubim,' reinforcing Hezekiah's depiction of God's majestic dwelling.
Psalm 80:1 directly echoes the phrase 'enthroned upon the cherubim,' using the same divine title Hezekiah invokes in his prayer.
Jeremiah 10:10-12 expands on God as the true God who made the earth and heavens by His power — directly affirming Hezekiah's confession.
2 Chronicles 32:20 confirms Hezekiah prayed in this crisis, mentioning Isaiah's involvement—strengthening the historical record.
2 Chronicles 14:11 shows Asa praying, 'Lord, there is no one like you to help'—directly paralleling Hezekiah's reliance on God alone.
Daniel 4:34 records Nebuchadnezzar praising God's eternal dominion, mirroring Hezekiah's acknowledgment that God rules over all kingdoms.
1 Kings 18:39 records the people crying 'The LORD, he is God,' affirming the same exclusive deity Hezekiah acknowledges: 'you alone are God.'
In 1 Kings 8:23, Solomon's prayer similarly addresses God as the unique God of heaven and earth, paralleling Hezekiah's confession.
2 Samuel 7:18-28 is David's covenant prayer—Hezekiah's opening echoes David's address to God as sovereign over all kingdoms.
1 Samuel 4:4 describes the LORD as 'enthroned on the cherubim', identical to Hezekiah's description in his prayer.
Exodus 25:22 describes God's presence above the cherubim on the ark, the very imagery Hezekiah uses in his prayer.
Daniel 4:35 reinforces this exclusive sovereignty — God does as He wills among heaven's host and earth's inhabitants, none can question Him.
Genesis 24:3 also invokes God as 'God of heaven and earth,' echoing the same creator-sovereign title used in Hezekiah's prayer.
Isaiah 37:15 records the identical prayer of Hezekiah in a parallel prophetic account of the same event.
Nehemiah 9:6 makes the same confession of God as sole creator of heaven and earth, directly paralleling Hezekiah's prayer.
1 Chronicles 13:6 uses the same divine title 'enthroned above the cherubim' referring to the ark, directly paralleling Hezekiah's address.
Hebrews 9:5 describes the cherubim of glory overshadowing the mercy seat — the very image of God 'enthroned between the cherubim' here.
Genesis 2:4 describes God making earth and heavens, reinforcing the creation theme from Hezekiah's prayer.