Ezekiel 47:14

And ye shall inherit it, one as well as another: concerning the which I lifted up mine hand to give it unto your fathers: and this land shall fall unto you for inheritance.

Cross-reference

Ezekiel 47:22 expands the inheritance to include foreigners, building on the land promise in verse 14.

Ezekiel 48:29 concludes the land division vision, specifying the inheritance portions that Ezekiel 47:14 introduces.

Ezekiel 20:42 reaffirms the oath to bring Israel into the land sworn to their fathers, mirroring the promise.

Ezekiel 20:28 refers to the same land God swore to give, though noting Israel's idolatry after entering it.

Ezekiel 20:6 continues the oath, describing the promised land flowing with milk and honey, echoing the inheritance.

Ezekiel 20:5 recounts the same oath God swore to Israel's fathers in Egypt, grounding the inheritance promise.

Numbers 14:30 declares that the rebellious generation will not enter the land God swore, directly opposing the inheritance promise in Ezekiel 47:14.

Genesis 12:7 records God's original promise to Abraham to give the land to his offspring, the basis for the oath.

Genesis 28:13 reaffirms the land promise to Jacob, the same covenant oath referenced in Ezekiel 47:14.

Genesis 26:3 extends the land oath to Isaac, forming part of the patriarchal promise that Ezekiel 47:14 recalls.

Genesis 17:8 repeats the land promise to Abraham as an everlasting possession, the same oath Ezekiel 47:14 invokes.

Genesis 15:7 records God's oath to Abraham to give this land, which Ezekiel 47:14 later alludes to as the basis for the inheritance.

In Genesis 12:7, God's promise to Abraham is the source of the inheritance oath mentioned here.

Numbers 34:2 gives the boundaries of the land of inheritance, matching the theme of land distribution in Ezekiel 47:14.

Exodus 6:8 Allusion

Exodus 6:8 repeats the land oath to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the same promise underlying Ezekiel 47:14.

Numbers 14:16 quotes the nations' claim that God could not bring them into the land he swore, contrasting with the fulfillment in Ezekiel.

Jeremiah 30:3 echoes the same promise of restoring Israel to the land given to their fathers, reinforcing the inheritance theme.