Isaiah 19:22
And the Lord shall smite Egypt: he shall smite and heal it: and they shall return even to the Lord, and he shall be intreated of them, and shall heal them.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 19:1-15, the judgment (striking) on Egypt is detailed — this verse promises healing after that striking.
In Isaiah 6:10, God prevents turning and healing — opposite of Egypt who returns and is healed here.
Isaiah 55:7 calls the wicked to return for pardon — mirrors Egypt returning to the Lord and being healed.
Isaiah 10:21 speaks of Israel's remnant returning to God — mirroring the turning of Egypt to the Lord in this verse.
Isaiah 17:7 describes people turning to their Maker — a similar repentance motif as Egypt's turning here.
In Deuteronomy 32:39, God declares He wounds and heals — the same divine power exercised here as He strikes and heals Egypt.
In Job 5:18, God wounds and binds up — echoing the pattern of judgment and restoration seen here.
Amos 4:6-12 shows God sending judgments but Israel never returned — opposite of Egypt who does return and is healed.
Acts 28:26 quotes Isaiah 6 about Israel's dullness — they do not turn, contrasting with Egypt's repentance here.
Acts 28:27 continues the quote — if they turned, God would heal them, but they don't; Egypt does turn and is healed.
Ezekiel 29:13 promises the gathering of Egyptians after exile — echoing God's restorative healing for Egypt in this verse.
Hosea 14:1 calls Israel to return to the Lord — similar summons to repentance as Egypt's return here.
In Ezra 8:23, God answers the prayers of His people — showing the same responsiveness to pleas as promised for Egypt here.
In Acts 26:17-20, Paul preaches turning from darkness to light for forgiveness — parallel to Egypt turning and receiving healing.
Hebrews 12:11 describes painful discipline yielding peaceful fruit — analogous to God's striking Egypt leading to healing.