Isaiah 10:20

And it shall come to pass in that day, that the remnant of Israel, and such as are escaped of the house of Jacob, shall no more again stay upon him that smote them; but shall stay upon the Lord, the Holy One of Israel, in truth.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 37:32 declares a remnant will go out from Jerusalem by God's zeal — the very deliverance that causes the remnant to trust Him here.

Isaiah 6:13 Allusion

Isaiah 6:13 promises a surviving stump, a holy seed — the same remnant that later returns to rely on God in this verse.

Isaiah 37:31 promises the escaped remnant of Judah will take root — a direct parallel to the same remnant depending on God in this verse.

Isaiah 65:9 Parallel

In Isaiah 65:9, God promises to bring a faithful remnant from Jacob to inherit the land—the same remnant that will rely on Him.

Isaiah 28:5 Parallel

In Isaiah 28:5, the Lord is a glorious crown for the remnant—explicitly connects God's glory to the same remnant theme.

In Isaiah 24:13, gleanings left after harvest symbolize a remnant—the same image of a surviving few who will trust God.

Isaiah 48:2 Contrast

In Isaiah 48:2, hypocritical reliance on God contrasts with the remnant’s genuine, truthful leaning on the Holy One.

Isaiah 48:1 Contrast

In Isaiah 48:1, people swear by God but not in truth—contrasting with the remnant who leans on God in truth.

Isaiah 1:9 Parallel

In Isaiah 1:9, a remnant is saved from total destruction — the same concept of a preserved seed that underlies the future hope in this verse.

Isaiah 4:2 Parallel

Isaiah 4:2 also speaks of 'those of Israel who have escaped' in 'that day' — directly paralleling the remnant theme and the time frame here.

Isaiah 4:3 Parallel

In Isaiah 4:3, the remnant left in Zion are called holy — a parallel outcome to the remnant that now depends on the Lord.

Isaiah 26:3 Parallel

In Isaiah 26:3, perfect peace comes to those whose mind is stayed on God—similar to the remnant’s steadfast trust in Him.

Isaiah 17:7 Parallel

In Isaiah 17:7, people look to their Maker and the Holy One—matching the remnant leaning on the Holy One of Israel in truth.

Isaiah 26:4 Parallel

In Isaiah 26:4, the call to trust in the LORD forever reinforces the remnant’s shift from Assyria to God as their strength.

Isaiah 17:8 Parallel

In Isaiah 17:8, people turn from idols—parallel to the remnant abandoning trust in Assyria to rely on God alone.

In Isaiah 50:10, the fearful are told to trust in God—paralleling the remnant’s decision to rely on Him in darkness.

Romans 9:27-29 quotes Isaiah's remnant prophecy, applying it to Paul's day — the same OT promise of a saved remnant is fulfilled in the gospel era.

Hosea 5:13 Parallel

In Hosea 5:13, Ephraim goes to Assyria for healing but is not cured—mirroring the futile reliance the remnant abandons.

Hosea 14:3 Parallel

In Hosea 14:3, Israel declares 'Asshur shall not save us'—echoing the remnant’s decision to no longer lean on Assyria.

2 Kings 16:7 shows Ahaz relying on Assyria — the very sin the remnant here repents of, no longer depending on their conqueror.

In 2 Kings 19:30, a remnant of Judah takes root and bears fruit—the survival theme matches the remnant relying on God.

Micah 5:3 Parallel

Micah 5:3 prophesies the rest of his brothers returning to Israel, directly paralleling the remnant returning to God in truth.

In 1 Kings 19:18, God preserves 7,000 who did not bow to Baal—the same faithful remnant who will rely on God alone.

2 Chronicles 28:20 Historical context

In 2 Chronicles 28:20, Ahaz relied on Assyria and was distressed—showing why the remnant will stop leaning on the one who struck them.

Ezra 9:14 Contrast

In Ezra 9:14, the post-exilic community fears God will consume them leaving no remnant — a contrast to the faithful remnant promised here.

Jeremiah 44:14 describes a remnant that will not return to Judah, contrasting with the promise here of a remnant leaning on God.

Ezekiel 14:22 also speaks of survivors left after judgment, echoing the remnant theme but focusing on their conduct.

Zephaniah 3:13 describes the remnant's righteous character — no deceit, no fear — complementing those who lean on God in truth.