Deuteronomy 28:10

And all people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of the Lord; and they shall be afraid of thee.

Cross-references

In Deuteronomy 4:6-8, nations observe Israel's wisdom and nearness to God — parallel to being called by His name and inspiring awe.

In Deuteronomy 11:25, God promises to put fear of Israel on all lands — the same effect promised in the latter part of this verse.

Deuteronomy 2:25 promises the same fear and dread of Israel upon all nations as they enter the land — a direct preview of the blessing later elaborated in Deut 28:10.

In Numbers 6:27, the priestly blessing puts the Lord's name on Israel — the same concept of being called by His name here promises blessing and awe.

Joshua 5:1 Prophetic fulfillment

In Joshua 5:1, kings' hearts melted when they heard of God's acts — a fulfillment of the fear of Israel promised here.

1 Chronicles 14:17 Prophetic fulfillment

In 1 Chronicles 14:17, the LORD brings fear of David on all nations — a direct instance of the promise in Deut 28:10 that peoples will fear those called by God’s name.

In 2 Chronicles 7:14, 'my people who are called by my name' shows the same identity, but adds the condition of humble repentance for restoration.

In Isaiah 63:19, the lament 'not called by your name' contrasts with this promise — a situation where that status is lost.

In Jeremiah 33:9, Jerusalem becomes a name that causes nations to fear and tremble — a prophetic echo of Deut 28:10’s promise that peoples will fear Israel as God’s people.

Daniel 9:18 Parallel

In Daniel 9:18, Daniel appeals based on Jerusalem being called by God's name — using this phrase as a plea for mercy.

Daniel 9:19 Parallel

In Daniel 9:19, Daniel continues the plea: 'your city and your people are called by your name' — the same basis for divine action.

Malachi 3:12 echoes the nations' positive response — calling Israel blessed instead of afraid — fulfilling the recognition promised here.

Joshua 2:9 Prophetic fulfillment

In Joshua 2:9, Rahab confesses that terror of Israel has fallen on all Canaanites — a concrete fulfillment of the fear promised in Deut 28:10 for those called by God’s name.

In 1 Samuel 18:12-15, Saul sees the LORD is with David, causing fear — the same dynamic of God’s presence bringing fear to enemies as in Deut 28:10.

In 1 Samuel 18:29, Saul’s continual fear of David illustrates the lasting dread that God’s presence inspires, matching Deut 28:10’s promise of terror on enemies.