Daniel 9:10

Neither have we obeyed the voice of the Lord our God, to walk in his laws, which he set before us by his servants the prophets.

Cross-reference

Daniel 9:6 Parallel

Daniel 9:6 similarly confesses not hearkening to the prophets — a near repetition of the same admission of disobedience.

Daniel 9:14 Parallel

Daniel 9:14 continues the prayer, repeating the confession of not obeying God's voice and linking it to the calamity God brought.

2 Kings 17:13 Historical context

2 Kings 17:13 records God sending prophets to warn, illustrating the very command Daniel 9:10 says they disobeyed.

2 Kings 18:12 Historical context

2 Kings 18:12 states Israel did not obey the voice of the Lord, identical to Daniel 9:10's confession of the same sin.

Ezra 9:10 Parallel

In Ezra 9:10, the same confession of forsaking God's commandments given through prophets appears, echoing the theme of national disobedience.

Nehemiah 9:13–17 Historical context

Nehemiah 9:13-17 recounts the giving of the law and Israel's rebellion, providing the historical background for Daniel's confession.

Isaiah 24:5 Parallel

Isaiah 24:5 speaks of transgressing laws and breaking the everlasting covenant, aligning with Daniel's confession of disobedience.

Jeremiah 32:23 uses identical language: 'did not obey your voice or walk in your law' — the very failure Daniel confesses here.

In Jeremiah 16:11, the same charge of forsaking God and not keeping His law is given as the reason for judgment, echoing Daniel's confession.

Jeremiah 3:25 contains a nearly identical confession of not obeying God's voice, reinforcing the pattern of penitential prayer.

2 Kings 22:13 records a similar confession that fathers did not obey the book of the law, directly paralleling Daniel's admission.

2 Kings 10:31 describes Jehu's failure to obey the law, illustrating the individual disobedience that Daniel confesses corporately.

Nehemiah 9:27 describes God's response to disobedience—deliverance after suffering—completing the covenant cycle that Daniel's confession begins.

Ezra 9:11 Historical context

Ezra 9:11 specifies the prophetic command about land defilement, adding concrete content to the general disobedience confessed in Daniel.

Ezekiel 11:12 adds that Israel followed the rules of surrounding nations instead of God's statutes, specifying the disobedience Daniel confesses.

Ezekiel 14:13 describes God's judgment on a land that sins faithlessly, illustrating the consequence of the disobedience Daniel laments.

2 Kings 21:9 shows Manasseh leading Israel to not listen, mirroring the collective disobedience confessed in Daniel.

Hebrews 1:1 Parallel

Hebrews 1:1 affirms that God spoke through prophets, reinforcing the source of the laws that Israel disobeyed in Daniel.