Ezekiel 39:22
So the house of Israel shall know that I am the Lord their God from that day and forward.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 39:28 expands on this: Israel will know the LORD through being gathered from exile, reinforcing the same recognition theme.
Ezekiel 39:7 uses the same phrase—God makes His holy name known among Israel so that nations know He is the LORD.
Ezekiel 34:30 also says they will know the LORD their God is with them, affirming the same intimate covenant relationship.
Ezekiel 28:26 repeats the covenant formula: after judgment on surrounding nations, Israel will dwell securely and know the LORD.
In Ezekiel 37:6, the same 'know that I am the LORD' phrase marks the resurrection promise, connecting Israel's future knowledge with new life.
Ezekiel 14:11 aims for Israel to be God's people and God their God, the same covenantal outcome as knowing Him.
Ezekiel 16:62 has 'you shall know that I am the LORD' after covenant establishment, an identical recognition formula.
Ezekiel 37:23 adds cleansing and the covenant formula 'they shall be my people', showing the renewal that accompanies knowing Him.
Ezekiel 34:24 adds that God will be their God with David as prince, reinforcing the covenant relationship implied in knowing He is their God.
1 John 5:20 says Christ gives understanding to know the true God—the NT realization of the knowledge of God promised in Ezekiel.
John 17:3 defines eternal life as knowing God and Jesus Christ—the NT fulfillment of the OT promise that Israel will know the LORD.
Jeremiah 31:34 declares that all will know the LORD directly in the new covenant—a fuller expression of the same promise of intimate knowledge.
Jeremiah 24:7 promises a heart to know the LORD and the covenant formula 'they shall be my people'—matching Ezekiel's language exactly.
Jeremiah 32:38 repeats 'they shall be my people, I will be their God,' directly parallel to knowing God as their God.
Joel 2:27 echoes the same promise that Israel will know God is in their midst, extending the assurance to a future restoration.
Exodus 16:12 has 'know that I am the LORD your God' after provision, connecting recognition to deliverance.
Exodus 7:5 uses the same 'know that I am the LORD' formula regarding judgment on Egypt, linking God's acts to recognition.
Hebrews 8:10 shows the new covenant where God writes His law on hearts and claims His people, echoing the relationship implied in knowing Him.
Jeremiah 31:1 declares God will be the God of Israel and they His people, a covenant relationship that knowing God fulfills.
Psalm 79:10 asks God to avenge His people so nations know Him, echoing the theme of divine action leading to recognition.
Psalm 9:16 declares God makes Himself known by executing judgment—a parallel to the divine self‑revelation through judgment here.