Ezekiel 16:60
Nevertheless I will remember my covenant with thee in the days of thy youth, and I will establish unto thee an everlasting covenant.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 16:8 describes God making the original covenant with Israel — the very covenant that is remembered and restored in this verse.
Ezekiel 16:62 repeats the promise of establishing the covenant, reinforcing the assurance given in this verse within the same passage.
Ezekiel 16:53 promises to restore fortunes of Sodom, Samaria, and Jerusalem; verse 60 grounds that restoration in God's covenant remembrance.
Ezekiel 16:22 accuses Israel of not remembering her youth; here God declares He will remember that very covenant — a direct contrast within the same chapter.
Ezekiel 37:26 promises an everlasting covenant of peace; Ezekiel 16:60 also promises an everlasting covenant, reinforcing the same prophecy.
Ezekiel 20:37 speaks of bringing Israel into the bond of the covenant after purging — a complementary picture of covenant renewal through judgment.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 details the new covenant with internalized law — the specific form this everlasting covenant will take.
Hosea 2:15 promises restoration with 'days of her youth'; Ezekiel 16:60 uses the same 'days of your youth' language for covenant renewal.
Hosea 2:19 uses betrothal imagery to depict the restored covenant — directly matching Ezekiel 16's marriage metaphor for the same promise.
Hosea 2:20 adds faithfulness and knowledge of the Lord to the betrothal — deepening the relational aspect of the everlasting covenant.
Luke 1:72 speaks of God remembering His holy covenant; this NT echo aligns with God's promise to remember in Ezekiel 16:60.
Jeremiah 32:38-41 promises the same everlasting covenant with the same 'I will be their God' formula — nearly identical wording.
Jeremiah 2:2 has God recalling Israel's 'youth' devotion; Ezekiel 16:60 also mentions 'days of your youth' in covenant context.
Isaiah 55:3 echoes the promise of an everlasting covenant, linking it to David's sure love — expanding the scope to a Davidic fulfillment.
Hebrews 8:10 cites the new covenant with law written on hearts — the NT realization of God's everlasting covenant promised here.
Psalm 106:45 says God remembered His covenant and relented, mirroring the mercy shown in Ezekiel 16:60.
Psalm 105:8 declares God remembers His covenant forever, directly paralleling God's promise in Ezekiel 16:60 to remember.
Hebrews 12:24 identifies Jesus as mediator of a new covenant — the everlasting covenant finds its mediator and fulfillment in Christ.
Hebrews 13:20 explicitly calls Christ's blood the 'eternal covenant' — directly naming the everlasting covenant promised in Ezekiel.
Leviticus 26:45 has God remembering the covenant with ancestors; Ezekiel 16:60 echoes this same covenantal faithfulness after judgment.
Jeremiah 31:32 contrasts the broken old covenant with the new; here God remembers the old and promises an everlasting covenant, both anticipating restoration.
Hebrews 8:8 quotes the promise of a new covenant with Israel, directly paralleling the everlasting covenant God establishes here.
Leviticus 26:44 assures that God will not break covenant even when Israel is in exile — the same covenantal faithfulness promised here.
In Genesis 9:15, God promises to remember His covenant with Noah; here, God echoes that same faithful remembrance despite Israel's unfaithfulness.
Leviticus 26:42 promises God will remember his covenant with the patriarchs — reinforcing the same 'remember my covenant' theme of restoration here.
Proverbs 2:17 describes an unfaithful wife who forgets her marriage covenant; here God contrasts human forgetfulness by choosing to remember His covenant.
Nehemiah 1:5-11 prays for God to remember His covenant, directly echoing the promise in Ezekiel 16:60 of God remembering.
2 Samuel 23:5 records David's own confession of God's everlasting covenant with him — grounding the promise in earlier covenant history.
Hosea 1:11 promises reunification of Israel and Judah under one head, echoing the restoration implied in God's everlasting covenant here.
Jeremiah 50:5 shifts perspective to the people's response — they seek to join themselves to the Lord in an everlasting covenant.
Jeremiah 33:20-26 assures God's covenant is fixed like day and night; Ezekiel 16:60 promises an everlasting covenant, sharing covenant certainty.
Romans 5:20 shows grace abounding where sin increased, mirroring God's grace in establishing covenant despite Israel's unfaithfulness.
Isaiah 54:4 promises Israel will forget the shame of her youth; here God remembers the covenant from those same early days, bringing restoration.