Ezekiel 18:22
All his transgressions that he hath committed, they shall not be mentioned unto him: in his righteousness that he hath done he shall live.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 18:24 presents the opposite: a righteous person who turns to sin has their former righteousness forgotten — a direct contrast.
Ezekiel 33:16 repeats almost verbatim that sins are not remembered after repentance — reinforcing the same promise.
Ezekiel 14:20 affirms that personal righteousness delivers only the individual, reinforcing the principle of individual accountability.
Hebrews 10:4 says animal sacrifices cannot take away sins—contrasting with God's promise here to forget sins after repentance.
In Hebrews 8:12, the new covenant promise 'I will remember their sins no more' directly aligns with this verse.
Galatians 6:8 contrasts sowing to the Spirit (eternal life) with sowing to the flesh—the positive side parallels reaping life from righteousness here.
In Romans 8:1, no condemnation for those in Christ expands the principle of not being held accountable for past sins.
Romans 2:7 promises eternal life to those who persist in doing good, directly paralleling the 'he will live' promised here for righteousness.
In Micah 7:19, God casting sins into the sea vividly echoes the non-remembrance of offenses here.
In Jeremiah 50:20, future forgiveness leaves no guilt found — paralleling the complete erasure of offenses here.
In Jeremiah 31:34, the new covenant promise of forgiven and unremembered sins matches the individual hope here.
In Isaiah 43:25, God declares He blots out transgressions and remembers sins no more — directly paralleling this verse.
In Psalm 103:12, sins removed as far as east from west amplifies the complete forgiveness promised here.
In Psalm 51:1, David's plea to blot out transgressions reflects the same hope of erased sin found here.
In Psalm 32:2, the blessing of not having sin counted against them echoes the promise here that offenses won't be remembered.
Psalm 25:7 pleads for God not to remember youthful sins — a parallel petition to the promise that sins are not remembered.
Leviticus 16:22 shows sins carried away by the scapegoat — a ceremonial parallel to God not remembering sins here.