Exodus 32:13
Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, thy servants, to whom thou swarest by thine own self, and saidst unto them, I will multiply your seed as the stars of heaven, and all this land that I have spoken of will I give unto your seed, and they shall inherit it for ever.
Cross-references
Exodus 33:1 shows God immediately reaffirming the land promise Moses just invoked — the plea is answered.
Exodus 6:8 records God's own oath to give the land to Abraham's offspring — the very promise Moses pleads here.
Genesis 28:14 promises Jacob offspring as dust and blessing to all families—Moses cites this multiplication promise.
Deuteronomy 9:27 recounts Moses' parallel prayer, also appealing to God's covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
Deuteronomy 7:8 explains God's love and oath to the fathers as the reason for redemption, reinforcing the covenant basis Moses cites.
Luke 1:55 specifies the promise to Abraham and his offspring forever, directly linking to the covenant Moses invokes.
Leviticus 26:42 repeats God's promise to remember his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, directly aligning with Moses' plea here.
Hebrews 6:13 explains God swore by Himself to Abraham, grounding the unchanging covenant that Moses appeals to.
Genesis 35:12 repeats the land grant to Jacob and his seed—Moses reminds God of this inheritance.
Genesis 35:11 is God's blessing to Jacob to be fruitful and become a nation—the very promise Moses invokes.
Genesis 28:13 is God's promise to Jacob of the land—Moses includes Jacob in his appeal.
Genesis 26:4 expands the oath to Isaac with the promise of countless descendants and universal blessing, echoing Moses’ plea.
Genesis 26:3 shows God reaffirming the same oath to Isaac, promising land and blessing for his offspring.
Genesis 12:2 contains the original promise to make Abraham a great nation, the basis for Moses’ request to multiply Israel.
Genesis 22:16 records God’s self-oath after Isaac’s binding, the very promise of multiplied offspring that Moses recalls.
Genesis 15:18 defines the covenant land boundaries—the specific grant Moses asks God to remember.
Genesis 15:7 records God's self-identification as the one who brought Abraham to give him this land—the land promise Moses pleads.
Genesis 15:5 is the star-counting promise Moses directly references for multiplying descendants.
Genesis 13:16 contains God's promise to make Abraham's offspring like dust—the exact promise Moses pleads to remind God of His covenant.
Genesis 13:15 reinforces the land grant to Abraham and his offspring forever, a key part of the covenant Moses cites.
Genesis 12:7 promises the land to Abraham’s offspring, directly matching the land aspect of Moses’ appeal.
Hebrews 11:12 recalls Abraham's descendants as numerous as stars — exactly the promised multiplication Moses reminds God of here.
Hebrews 6:14 quotes God's oath to Abraham 'I will surely bless you and multiply you' — the same multiplication promise Moses pleads here.
Jeremiah 14:21 begs God not to break his covenant — a later echo of Moses' 'remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel' appeal.
Psalm 105:42 celebrates God remembering his holy promise to Abraham — the same promise Moses calls to mind.
2 Kings 13:23 shows God sparing Israel later because of the covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob — identical reasoning to Moses' plea.
Deuteronomy 9:5 explains that the land gift is due to the oath to the patriarchs — the same basis Moses used to intercede.
Deuteronomy 1:11 expands the same promise with a blessing — 'a thousand times as many' — echoing the patriarchs' covenant.
Deuteronomy 1:10 notes the fulfillment of the multiplication promise — the stars-of-heaven count is realized.
In Genesis 32:12, Jacob prays using the same promise of offspring as the sand — Moses later echoes that appeal before God.
Genesis 24:7 records Abraham's servant recalling God's promise to give the land to Isaac—Moses appeals to that same covenant.
Genesis 48:16 is Jacob's blessing for his grandsons to grow into a multitude—parallel to the multiplication promise Moses pleads.