Deuteronomy 5:1
And Moses called all Israel, and said unto them, Hear, O Israel, the statutes and judgments which I speak in your ears this day, that ye may learn them, and keep, and do them.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 5:31 records God telling Moses to receive the commandments—the source of what he then declares in 5:1.
Deuteronomy 1:1 introduces Moses' first speech; 5:1 introduces a subsequent speech with a similar summoning formula.
Deuteronomy 4:1 echoes the same call to hear and obey statutes and judgments, forming a bookend to the discourse.
Deuteronomy 29:2 uses the exact same phrase 'Moses summoned all Israel' at the start of another speech, mirroring this verse.
Deuteronomy 4:13 refers to the covenant and Ten Commandments, which are the content Moses is about to proclaim in chapter 5.
Romans 2:13 emphasizes doing the law, not just hearing—directly applying the principle here of hearing and observing.
John 1:17 contrasts the law given through Moses with grace through Jesus—highlighting a shift from this command.
1 Kings 2:3 echoes this call to keep God's statutes—David charges Solomon with the same obedience Moses commanded Israel.
2 Kings 23:3 mirrors this call—Josiah's covenant renewal has the people pledge to keep all the Lord's statutes.
2 Chronicles 33:8 repeats the condition that Israel must observe all the law to remain in the land—building on this command.
Nehemiah 1:7 confesses breaking the very commandments Moses gave here—showing failure to observe them.
Nehemiah 10:29 records the people binding themselves to keep the law Moses gave—directly fulfilling this call to observe.
Ezekiel 20:19 echoes this very command to walk in God's statutes—a repetition of the same charge.
Exodus 24:3 records the people's response to hearing the law—'All the words will we do'—complementing the call to hear in Deuteronomy 5:1.
Philippians 4:9 calls believers to practice what they learned—a NT echo of this OT pattern of hearing and doing.
Exodus 18:16 shows Moses already teaching statutes and laws, establishing his role as lawgiver before the repetition in Deuteronomy.
Ezekiel 18:9 describes a righteous person who walks in God's statutes—showing the life that comes from obeying this call.
Leviticus 20:22 similarly commands keeping statutes and judgments with a land warning, reinforcing the same call in Deuteronomy 5:1.
Leviticus 19:37 commands observance of all statutes and judgments, mirroring the call to do them in Deuteronomy 5:1.
Exodus 21:1 introduces judgments with a similar formula, 'these are the judgments,' parallel to Moses' introduction in Deuteronomy.