Ezekiel 37:22
And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all:
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 37:24 identifies the one king as David, specifying the ruler named in the preceding verse.
Ezekiel 37:17 shows the symbolic joining of two sticks—this verse declares the resulting one nation under one king.
Ezekiel 34:24 also mentions David as prince under God, reinforcing the one king promise in Ezekiel 37:22.
Ezekiel 34:23 appoints one shepherd (David) over the flock, directly providing the 'one king' promised in Ezekiel 37:22.
Ezekiel 34:13 describes gathering Israel to the mountains of Israel to be fed—here they are further united as one nation.
Ezekiel 20:40 promises all Israel worshiping on God's holy mountain—here that gathered nation is made one under one king.
Ezekiel 39:25 promises restoration of the whole house of Israel—here that restoration takes the form of one united nation.
In Revelation 11:15, the kingdom of the world becomes Christ's kingdom, fulfilling the vision of one king ruling forever.
Genesis 49:10 predicts a ruler from Judah, echoing the one king over unified Israel here.
In John 10:16, Jesus speaks of one flock and one shepherd, expanding the reunification of Israel to include Gentiles under one leader.
In Luke 1:33, Jesus' eternal reign over Jacob's descendants echoes the never-divided kingdom and everlasting kingship.
In Luke 1:32, the angel announces Jesus as heir to David's throne, fulfilling the promise of one king over God's people.
In Hosea 3:5, the return and seeking of David their king directly parallels the one king and reunification promised here.
Hosea 1:11 explicitly prophesies Judah and Israel reunited under one leader, directly paralleling Ezekiel's one nation and one king.
Jeremiah 50:4 depicts Israel and Judah together seeking God, reinforcing the theme of reunification.
In Jeremiah 33:26, God reaffirms His covenant with David, promising a descendant to rule, echoing the one king over reunited Israel.
Jeremiah 33:14 reaffirms God's promise to raise up a Davidic king for Israel's restoration.
Jeremiah 23:6 declares that king will save Judah and Israel, as this passage promises.
Jeremiah 23:5 announces a righteous Branch from David, the king who will unite Israel.
Jeremiah 3:18 also prophesies the joining of Judah and Israel from exile, matching Ezekiel's one nation promise.
Isaiah 11:13 speaks of the end of jealousy between Ephraim and Judah, directly addressing the division that Ezekiel says will end.
Isaiah 9:7 promises an eternal reign on David's throne, fulfilling the one-nation prophecy.
Isaiah 9:6 foretells a child born to rule, the same Davidic king united with divine authority.
In Jeremiah 16:15, God promises restoration from exile, directly paralleling the regathering and reunification into one nation.
Isaiah 11:12 similarly prophesies gathering of scattered Israel and Judah from the nations, echoing the reunification theme.
Jeremiah 32:39 promises God will give them one heart and one way, complementing the external reunification with internal unity.
Micah 5:2 also prophesies a coming ruler from Bethlehem over Israel, connecting to the one king promised here.
Ephesians 2:19-22 applies the unity theme to the church where Gentiles become fellow citizens, expanding the OT promise of one people.
Jeremiah 50:19 depicts Israel's return to fruitful pastures—this same restoration context undergirds Ezekiel's promise of one nation in the land.