Genesis 13:2
And Abram was very rich in cattle, in silver, and in gold.
Cross-reference
In Genesis 24:35, Abraham's servant lists the same wealth categories — livestock, silver, gold — crediting God's blessing for them.
Genesis 26:12 shows Isaac receiving the same divine blessing of prosperity, continuing the patriarchal pattern seen with Abram.
Genesis 26:13 echoes this directly — Isaac 'became very wealthy,' mirroring the same God-given prosperity described of Abram.
Genesis 12:16 describes how Abram acquired wealth from Pharaoh, leading to his prosperity here.
In Genesis 30:43, Jacob similarly becomes exceedingly wealthy in flocks and livestock — echoing Abraham's prosperity, showing God's blessing continuing across generations.
Genesis 24:1 states God blessed Abraham in every way, including his material wealth.
Genesis 26:14 describes Isaac's wealth, paralleling Abram's as a sign of blessing.
Proverbs 10:22 affirms God's blessing brings wealth, directly relevant to Abram's situation.
In 2 Chronicles 32:29, Hezekiah acquires flocks and herds in abundance because God gave him riches — the same livestock-wealth and divine blessing pattern.
Deuteronomy 8:18 reminds that God gives power to get wealth — the theological reality behind Abram's prosperity here.
Job 1:10 credits God's protective blessing for increasing possessions — the same divine source behind Abram's wealth.
Job 1:3 describes another patriarch blessed with vast livestock and great wealth, paralleling Abram's prosperity.
In Ecclesiastes 5:11, more goods bring more consumers with no real advantage to the owner — a sobering counterpoint to Abram's accumulating wealth.
1 Samuel 2:7 declares God makes rich and poor — the divine sovereignty over wealth that Abram's riches illustrate.
Psalm 112:1-3 describes wealth for the righteous, echoing Abram's blessed prosperity.
In Ecclesiastes 2:7, Solomon boasts of flocks and herds larger than predecessors — the same type of livestock wealth as Abram, though with a reflective tone.