Haggai 2:5
According to the word that I covenanted with you when ye came out of Egypt, so my spirit remaineth among you: fear ye not.
Cross-reference
Exodus 29:45 promises God will dwell among Israel—the same covenant presence recalled here as 'My Spirit remains in your midst'.
Exodus 29:46 ties God's presence to the exodus—directly linking to the covenant from Egypt mentioned here.
Exodus 33:12-14 shows God's presence going with Moses—parallel to 'My Spirit remains in your midst' here.
In Nehemiah 9:20, God gave His good Spirit to instruct Israel in the wilderness — reinforcing Haggai's claim that the Spirit still abides.
In Isaiah 63:11-14, the Holy Spirit in Israel's midst is recalled from the Exodus — directly echoing Haggai's covenant reference.
In Zechariah 4:6, the same prophetic context declares 'not by might but by my Spirit' — reinforcing Haggai's message of Spirit-empowerment.
In John 14:16, Jesus promises the Spirit to be with believers forever — fulfilling the OT promise of the Spirit's abiding presence.
In John 14:17, Jesus says the Spirit 'dwells with you' — a direct NT parallel to Haggai's 'My Spirit remains among you'.
In Numbers 11:25-29, the Spirit comes upon elders in the wilderness — the same Spirit Haggai says remains among the people.
In Nehemiah 9:30, the Spirit warned through prophets — showing one way the Spirit remained active, as Haggai promises.
In Psalm 51:11, David pleads not to lose the Holy Spirit — contrasting with Haggai's assurance that God's Spirit remains.
Ezekiel 43:4 describes the glory of the Lord entering the temple — a parallel theme of God's presence dwelling among His people as in Haggai's 'My Spirit remains.'