Daniel 6:13

Then answered they and said before the king, That Daniel, which is of the children of the captivity of Judah, regardeth not thee, O king, nor the decree that thou hast signed, but maketh his petition three times a day.

Cross-reference

Daniel 6:10 Parallel

Daniel 6:10 describes the very prayer practice that the accusers report in 6:13 — Daniel praying three times daily.

Daniel 2:25 Parallel

Daniel 2:25 also calls Daniel 'a man among the exiles of Judah', directly paralleling the phrase.

Daniel 3:12 Parallel

Daniel 3:12 recounts a similar accusation against Shadrach et al. for disobeying the king's command.

Daniel 5:13 Parallel

Daniel 5:13 uses the same 'exiles of Judah' identifier, reinforcing Daniel's status.

Daniel 3:8 Parallel

Daniel 3:8 has the same pattern: accusers maliciously bring charges against faithful Jews for disobeying a royal decree.

Daniel 1:6 Historical context

Daniel 1:6 names Daniel among the exiles from Judah, confirming his identity in the accusation.

Acts 5:29 Parallel

Acts 5:29 states the principle of obeying God rather than men, which Daniel exemplifies.

Exodus 1:17 Parallel

Exodus 1:17 shows midwives fearing God and disobeying Pharaoh, a clear parallel to Daniel's refusal.

Psalm 55:17 Parallel

Psalm 55:17 mentions prayer three times a day, matching Daniel's practice.

Proverbs 30:10 warns against slandering a servant to his master — exactly what Daniel's accusers do here.

Esther 3:8 Parallel

Esther 3:8 has Haman accuse all Jews of disregarding the king's laws, mirroring the charge against Daniel.

Esther 3:4 Parallel

Esther 3:4 reports Mordecai's refusal and his Jewish identity, similar to Daniel's situation.

Acts 17:7 Parallel

Acts 17:7 accuses Christians of acting against Caesar's decrees, a similar charge of religious civil disobedience.