Deuteronomy 33:28
Israel then shall dwell in safety alone: the fountain of Jacob shall be upon a land of corn and wine; also his heavens shall drop down dew.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 33:13, in the same chapter, blesses Joseph's land with dew and abundance, directly paralleling the imagery here.
Deuteronomy 12:10 speaks of living in safety after rest from enemies, a close thematic parallel to secure dwelling here.
Genesis 27:28 blesses Jacob with dew, fatness, grain, and wine — nearly identical language to this blessing on Israel.
Numbers 23:9 directly parallels 'a people dwelling alone, not counting itself among the nations' — the same idea of Israel's solitary security.
Leviticus 25:18 promises 'dwell in the land securely', the same phrase used here, linking obedience and blessing.
Jeremiah 49:31 uses the same phrase 'dwells securely, alone' for Edom, contrasting their false security with Israel's true blessing.
Micah 7:14 echoes 'dwell alone' in a prayer for God to shepherd His people, directly referencing the secure dwelling in Deuteronomy.
Zechariah 8:12 promises restored dew and produce to Israel, directly echoing the covenant blessing of grain, new wine, and dew.
Jeremiah 23:6 promises 'Israel will dwell securely' — the exact phrase used here, though in a Messianic future context.
Jeremiah 33:16 repeats 'Jerusalem will dwell securely' — same phrase applied to the city rather than the whole nation.
Ezekiel 34:25 promises 'they may dwell securely' under a covenant of peace — same wording, now extended to the wilderness.
Isaiah 26:19 speaks of 'dew of light' as a metaphor for resurrection, drawing on the life-giving dew imagery from Deuteronomy's blessing.
Proverbs 3:20 describes the clouds dropping dew as part of creation's order, paralleling the same imagery of heavenly blessing in Deuteronomy.