Hebrew Bible / 2 Chronicles / All
- 2 Chronicles 6:2 / Psalm 132:8
- 2 Chronicles 7:1 / Leviticus 9:24
- 2 Chronicles 7:14 / Leviticus 26:42
- 2 Chronicles 9:26 / Genesis 15:18
- 2 Chronicles 15:6 / Mark 13:8
- 2 Chronicles 16:9 / Zechariah 4:10
- 2 Chronicles 16:12 / Sirach 38:1
- 2 Chronicles 18:16 / Judith 11:20
- 2 Chronicles 20:7 / James 2:23
- 2 Chronicles 28:3 / Jeremiah 19:5
- 2 Chronicles 28:3 / 1 Enoch 27:2
- 2 Chronicles 28:5 / 2 Kings 16:5
- 2 Chronicles 30:2 / Numbers 9:11
- 2 Chronicles 30:9 / Exodus 34:6
- 2 Chronicles 32:31 / Deuteronomy 8:2
- 2 Chronicles 33:3 / Deuteronomy 4:19
- 2 Chronicles 35:6 / 2 Kings 24:6 / Daniel 1:2
- 2 Chronicles 35:13 / Exodus 12:9
- 2 Chronicles 35:13 / Deuteronomy 16:7
- 2 Chronicles 35:13 / LXX Deuteronomy 16:7
- 2 Chronicles 36:7 / Jeremiah 27:16
- 2 Chronicles 36:21 / Jeremiah 25:11
- 2 Chronicles 36:21 / Leviticus 26:34 / Daniel 9:2
- 2 Chronicles 36:22 / Ezra 1:1
- 2 Chronicles 36:23 / Matthew 4:8
- 2 Chronicles 36:23 / Isaiah 45:1
Summary
Date: 4th Century B.C.E.
The book of Chronicles is neither a chronicle nor an analytic work, but a complex theological-historical composition beginning with Adam and concluding with the Cyrus declarations (538 BCE). Chronicles should not be identified with the Annals of the Kings of Israel or the Annals of the Kings of Judah which are frequently mentioned in Kings, since Chronicles was written after Kings. Furthermore, even though in English Bibles, following the tradition of the Septuagint, Chronicles is divided into two books like Samuel and Kings, in the Hebrew tradition, it is a single book. It is thus proper to speak of the book rather than the books of Chronicles.