2 Kings 21:8

Neither will I make the feet of Israel move any more out of the land which I gave their fathers; only if they will observe to do according to all that I have commanded them, and according to all the law that my servant Moses commanded them.

Cross-reference

2 Kings 18:11 records the actual exile of Israel, contrasting the conditional promise here of not removing them if they obey.

Leviticus 26:3-13 outlines covenant blessings for obedience, which 2 Kings 21:8 alludes to as the basis for staying in the land.

Deuteronomy 5:29 expresses God's desire that Israel obey so it goes well with them, directly paralleling the condition here.

Deuteronomy 28:1-14 lists blessings for obedience; 2 Kings 21:8 applies that covenantal condition specifically to remaining in the land.

Joshua 23:11-13 warns that disobedience will prevent God from driving out nations, similar to the condition here for staying in the land.

2 Samuel 7:10 gave an unconditional land promise; 2 Kings 21:8 repeats it but adds a condition of obedience.

2 Chronicles 33:8 is the parallel account of Manasseh's reign, repeating this same conditional promise almost verbatim.

In Psalm 81:11-16, God laments Israel's refusal to listen, contrasting the blessing they could have had if obedient — the same conditional dynamic as in 2 Kings 21:8.

Isaiah 1:19 Parallel

In Isaiah 1:19, the same conditional formula appears: obedience leads to enjoying the land's bounty, directly reinforcing the promise in 2 Kings 21:8.

In Jeremiah 7:3-7, the prophet echoes the same conditional promise: if they amend their ways, they will dwell in the land given to their fathers.

In Jeremiah 7:23, God restates the command to obey His voice for their well-being, directly aligning with the condition for remaining in the land in 2 Kings 21:8.

In Ezekiel 22:2-16, the prophet lists Israel's sins, showing why they are being expelled from the land — the broken condition of 2 Kings 21:8.

In Ezekiel 33:25-29, God declares that because of their sins the land will become desolate — the opposite outcome of the promise in 2 Kings 21:8 if they obeyed.

In Deuteronomy 5:32, the command to carefully obey God's commandments is given, which is exactly the condition for staying in the land in 2 Kings 21:8.

In 2 Chronicles 33:8, the same conditional promise is repeated almost verbatim, reaffirming the condition for Israel's stay in the land.

In Jeremiah 17:20-27, the condition for dwelling in the land is applied specifically to Sabbath observance, showing a particular way the promise in 2 Kings 21:8 could be broken.