Deuteronomy 11:14
That I will give you the rain of your land in his due season, the first rain and the latter rain, that thou mayest gather in thy corn, and thy wine, and thine oil.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 28:12 repeats the promise of rain in its season for obedience — reinforcing the same covenant blessing from a different passage.
Leviticus 26:4 promises rain in its season and fruitful land — a parallel covenant blessing matching the one in Deuteronomy 11:14.
Psalm 65:9-13 poetically celebrates God's provision of rain and abundant harvests, echoing the promised early and latter rain.
Ezekiel 34:26 directly promises 'showers in their season' as a blessing, paralleling the early and latter rain in Deuteronomy.
Joel 2:23 explicitly mentions the early and latter rain, using the same language as Deuteronomy, as a sign of restoration.
James 5:7 directly cites the early and late rains as an analogy for patience, applying the agricultural promise to Christian endurance.
In Jeremiah 5:24, this same gift of autumn and spring rains is cited as evidence that people should fear the Lord, echoing the promise here.
In Zechariah 10:1, the call to ask the Lord for spring rain reinforces the idea that God alone provides rain for the harvest.
In Acts 14:17, Paul testifies that God gives rain and crops in season as ongoing evidence of His kindness, mirroring the promise.
Jeremiah 14:22 affirms that only the Lord, not idols, can bring rain — reinforcing the exclusive divine source of the rains promised.
Psalm 68:9 celebrates God sending abundant rain to restore his people, echoing the promise of seasonal rains.