Deuteronomy 9:27
Remember thy servants, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; look not unto the stubbornness of this people, nor to their wickedness, nor to their sin:
Cross-references
Exodus 3:6 identifies God as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob — the same patriarchs Moses asks God to remember here.
Exodus 3:16 instructs Moses to tell the elders that God is the God of your fathers — the covenant basis Moses appeals to in his prayer.
Exodus 6:3-8 recounts God's covenant promise to the patriarchs and his plan to redeem Israel — the very promise Moses pleads for God to remember.
Exodus 13:5 mentions God's oath to the fathers to give them the land — the same patriarchal covenant Moses invokes as a reason not to destroy Israel.
Exodus 32:13 records Moses' prayer asking God to remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel — the same intercessory plea found in this verse.
Exodus 32:32 shows Moses offering to be blotted out — a different but related part of the same intercessory prayer recorded here.
In Isaiah 43:25, God promises to blot out transgressions and remember sins no more — exactly what Moses sought.
In Jeremiah 50:20, God declares iniquity will be sought and none found because He pardons — ultimate fulfillment of Moses' plea.
In Micah 7:18, God is praised for pardoning iniquity and passing over transgression — directly echoes Moses' intercession.
In Micah 7:19, God casts sins into the sea — a vivid parallel to Moses asking God to not regard their sin.
Psalm 105:42 echoes Moses' plea — God remembers His covenant with Abraham, the same promise Moses appeals to here.
In Nehemiah 9:16, Israel's stubbornness and stiff neck are recalled — same character as in Deuteronomy 9:27.
In Psalm 78:8, Israel's stubbornness is described, the same word used in Deuteronomy 9:27 — reinforcing their rebellious nature.
Jeremiah 14:21 pleads with God to remember his covenant, similar to Moses' appeal to the patriarchal covenant when interceding for Israel.
Jeremiah 16:12 highlights the same stubbornness — but there God refuses to relent, contrasting with Moses' intercession.
Ezekiel 2:3 affirms the same rebellious nature of Israel — stubborn and sinful, as Moses acknowledges here.