Deuteronomy 4:5
Behold, I have taught you statutes and judgments, even as the Lord my God commanded me, that ye should do so in the land whither ye go to possess it.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 4:1 already introduces the statutes and life promise that 4:5 expands on—the same teaching context.
Deuteronomy 12:1 repeats the exact phrasing 'decrees and laws' and 'land to possess', directly continuing Moses' instruction for the land.
Deuteronomy 11:1 echoes the same call to keep decrees, tying obedience to loving God — a relational deepening of Moses' teaching.
Deuteronomy 6:1 repeats the same purpose: Moses teaching statutes so Israel may do them in the land—identical theme.
Deuteronomy 5:31 has God telling Moses to teach statutes—the divine origin of the teaching referenced here.
Deuteronomy 1:18 records Moses commanding the people all they should do—the same instructional authority seen here.
Hebrews 3:5 affirms Moses' faithfulness as a servant in God's house, undergirding his teaching role here.
Matthew 28:20 commissions teaching obedience to Christ's commands, mirroring Moses' commission to teach God's commands here.
Ezra 7:6 presents Ezra as a teacher well-versed in the Law of Moses, embodying the ongoing role of teaching God's decrees.
Exodus 12:25 similarly instructs observance when entering the promised land, directly linking to Moses' teaching here.
In Hebrews 3:2, Moses' faithfulness in God's house is highlighted, directly connecting to his faithful teaching role here.
Exodus 18:16 shows Moses already making known God's statutes—confirming the same teaching ministry mentioned here.
Malachi 4:4 directly cites the law of Moses with decrees given at Horeb — the same body of teaching from Deuteronomy 4:5.
Psalm 99:7 recounts Israel keeping the statutes God gave them — the same decrees Moses taught in Deuteronomy 4:5.
Nehemiah 9:14 recalls that God gave commands and decrees through Moses, affirming the divine origin of the teaching in Deuteronomy 4:5.
Nehemiah 1:7 confesses failure to obey the very commands and decrees Moses taught, creating a stark contrast to the obedience required.
Numbers 29:40 states Moses spoke all God's commands—identical to his teaching role described here.
1 Kings 2:3 explicitly references 'the Law of Moses' and commands obedience to its decrees, directly applying Moses' teaching to a new king.
Joshua 11:15 shows Joshua fully obeying everything Moses commanded, fulfilling the very decrees Moses taught in Deuteronomy 4:5.
Exodus 18:20 records Jethro's instruction to teach statutes—the very pattern Moses follows here.
Exodus 21:1 introduces the ordinances God commanded Moses to set before Israel—the content of what he taught.
Exodus 24:3 describes Moses recounting all God's words to the people, who pledged obedience—same law-giving event referenced here.
Leviticus 19:37 commands observance of all God's statutes—the very obedience Moses aims to produce here.
2 Chronicles 17:7 records Jehoshaphat sending officials to teach the law — a later echo of Moses' own teaching mission.
Psalm 19:8 praises the precepts and commands of the LORD — the very decrees Moses taught in Deuteronomy 4:5.
Numbers 9:5 shows Israel doing 'all that the LORD commanded Moses'—an example of the obedience taught here.