Isaiah 28:5
In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for a crown of glory, and for a diadem of beauty, unto the residue of his people,
Cross-reference
Isaiah 10:20 also describes the remnant leaning on the Lord, the same group that receives God as their crown here.
Isaiah 10:21 repeats the remnant returning to God, directly paralleling the remnant crowned with glory in this verse.
Isaiah 60:19 directly states the LORD will be your everlasting light and your God your glory—the same concept of God as the remnant's crown.
Isaiah 62:3 reverses the image: Israel becomes a crown of beauty in God's hand, showing mutual glorification between God and His people.
Isaiah 2:11 says the Lord alone will be exalted — here He is the crown of the remnant, fulfilling that exaltation.
Isaiah 60:1-3 also describes the LORD's glory rising upon Israel, echoing the crown of glory theme—God's presence brings splendor.
Jeremiah 9:24 says to boast only in knowing the LORD—directly parallel to the remnant's glory being in the LORD their crown.
Luke 2:32 calls Jesus 'a light for revelation to the Gentiles and glory to Israel'—fulfilling the image of the LORD as the remnant's crown of glory.
Romans 11:5 speaks of a remnant chosen by grace in the present time, continuing the biblical remnant theme from Isaiah.
In 1 Peter 5:4, the 'unfading crown of glory' given to faithful elders echoes God being a crown of glory here.
Zechariah 6:13-15 describes a crown placed on the high priest, symbolizing the Messiah who will bear royal honor—connecting crown imagery to God's glory.
1 Corinthians 1:30 says Christ became to us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption—akin to the LORD being our crown of glory.
Proverbs 4:9 says wisdom gives a crown — here the Lord Himself is the crown, contrasting human achievement with divine gift.
Jeremiah 9:23 warns against boasting in human wisdom or might, contrasting human glory with the divine glory that is the remnant's crown.