2 Samuel 23:5
Although my house be not so with God; yet he hath made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in all things, and sure: for this is all my salvation, and all my desire, although he make it not to grow.
Cross-reference
2 Samuel 7:14-16 is the original Davidic covenant promise that David echoes in his last words.
2 Samuel 7:18 records David's humble prayer of gratitude after God's covenant promise — the same covenantal context David reflects on here.
2 Samuel 12:10 pronounces the sword on David's house — the judgment that explains David's admission 'my house is not so with God'.
Isaiah 9:7 explicitly confirms the eternal throne of David, reinforcing the everlasting covenant mentioned here.
Hebrews 13:20 refers to the eternal covenant through Jesus, the fulfillment of the Davidic covenant David speaks of.
Acts 13:34 applies David's 'sure blessings' to Christ's resurrection — the ultimate fulfillment of the everlasting covenant.
Amos 9:11 promises to restore David's fallen shelter, directly echoing the everlasting covenant David mentions here — a clear prophetic fulfillment.
Ezekiel 37:26 promises an everlasting covenant of peace with David as king, directly relating to David's covenant here.
Jeremiah 33:26 continues the promise of Davidic succession, reinforcing the everlasting covenant David mentions.
Jeremiah 33:25 references God's covenant with David as fixed as the order of creation, affirming its permanence.
Isaiah 55:3 uses the same 'everlasting covenant' and 'sure love for David', directly tying to David's covenant here.
Isaiah 11:1 directly describes a shoot from Jesse's stump, the messianic Branch from David's line, fulfilling the everlasting covenant David trusts in.
Psalm 89:28 echoes God's promise of an everlasting covenant with David, reinforcing the security of the covenant here.
Psalm 89:3 quotes God's covenant oath to David, the same everlasting covenant David trusts in his final words.
1 Chronicles 17:11-14 is the Chronicler's parallel account of the same covenant promise David reflects on.
1 Kings 11:38 shows God offering a dynasty like David's — directly alluding to the covenant David trusts in here.
1 Kings 2:24 shows Solomon acknowledging God's promise to establish his throne, directly fulfilling the everlasting covenant.
In 1 Samuel 25:28, Abigail prophesies a lasting dynasty for David — the same covenant assurance he later celebrates.
Psalm 105:10 repeats the everlasting covenant with Israel—identical phrasing to 1 Chron 16:17, paralleling David's covenant declaration.
In Isaiah 24:5, the everlasting covenant is broken by transgression — contrasting with David's secure covenant here.
Isaiah 54:10 assures God's covenant of peace will never be removed — parallel to David's secure everlasting covenant here.
2 Chronicles 21:7 explicitly mentions God's covenant with David, showing its enduring protection—strengthening David's confidence here.
Jeremiah 33:21 declares the covenant with David cannot be broken — affirming the security of David's everlasting covenant here.
1 Chronicles 16:17 confirms the everlasting covenant made with Jacob—directly paralleling the covenant David celebrates here.
Ezekiel 16:60 promises God will establish an everlasting covenant — parallel to David's covenant here.
Jeremiah 50:5 speaks of joining to the Lord in an everlasting covenant — similar to David's everlasting covenant here.
1 Kings 11:6-8 describes Solomon's idolatry, a direct contrast to the secure and ordered covenant David trusted in.
1 Samuel 2:35 promises a faithful priest with an enduring house — a parallel to the everlasting covenant God made with David here.