Daniel 3:29

Therefore I make a decree, That every people, nation, and language, which speak any thing amiss against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed–nego, shall be cut in pieces, and their houses shall be made a dunghill: because there is no other God that can deliver after this sort.

Cross-reference

Daniel 3:28 Parallel

Daniel 3:28 blesses God for delivering the men; 3:29 adds a protective decree honoring that God.

Daniel 3:17 Parallel

Daniel 3:17 is the three men's declaration that God is able to deliver, affirmed by the king's decree in 3:29.

Daniel 3:15 Parallel

Daniel 3:15 contains the king's boastful challenge 'who is that God?' which is answered by his own decree admitting no other god delivers.

Daniel 6:27 Parallel

Daniel 6:27 highlights God's deliverance of Daniel from lions, a similar rescue confirming God's unique saving power.

Daniel 6:26 Parallel

Daniel 6:26 records another king's decree praising God, mirroring Nebuchadnezzar's recognition of God's unique power.

Daniel 2:5 Parallel

Daniel 2:5 uses the same severe penalty 'cut in pieces, houses made a dunghill' for a different offense, showing the king's consistent decree style.

Daniel 4:1 Parallel

Daniel 4:1 opens another royal proclamation from Nebuchadnezzar — a later, broader testimony to God's sovereignty following the same pattern.

In 1 Samuel 17:46, David declares that all may know there is a God in Israel. Nebuchadnezzar similarly proclaims that no other god can deliver like Israel's God.

Ezekiel 36:23 Related theme

Ezekiel 36:23 says God will show his holiness so nations know he is Lord — the same purpose behind the king's worldwide decree.

Isaiah 44:17 depicts an idol-worshiper begging a wooden god to save — a stark contrast to the decree that only the true God delivers.

Psalm 135:5 Related theme

Psalm 135:5 declares the Lord greater than all gods — the very truth the decree enforces after God's unmatched deliverance.

Psalm 86:8 Parallel

In Psalm 86:8, the same affirmation that no god is like Yahweh echoes the king's decree — God's uniqueness proven by deliverance.

Ezra 6:11 Parallel

In Ezra 6:11, Darius decrees that anyone altering his order will have his house made a dunghill. The same penalty appears in this decree against blasphemy.

2 Kings 10:27 describes the house of Baal being made a latrine. Here the decree orders the house of anyone speaking against God to be made a dunghill—same imagery.

In 2 Kings 5:15, Naaman confesses 'there is no God in all the earth but in Israel.' Nebuchadnezzar makes the same exclusive declaration after the fiery furnace.

In Deuteronomy 3:24, Moses asks 'what god is there who can do great works like yours?' Nebuchadnezzar echoes that same rhetorical question about deliverance.

Habakkuk 2:19 condemns lifeless idols, while Daniel 3:29 declares no other god can deliver—both affirm the living God over powerless images.

Psalm 76:10 Related theme

In Psalm 76:10, human wrath ultimately praises God. Nebuchadnezzar's angry decree against the three men led to this very praise of God.

Ezra 7:26 Parallel

Ezra 7:26 is a royal decree threatening severe punishment for disobeying God's law. This decree similarly threatens punishment for speaking against God.