Isaiah 29:22

Therefore thus saith the Lord, who redeemed Abraham, concerning the house of Jacob, Jacob shall not now be ashamed, neither shall his face now wax pale.

Cross-reference

Isaiah 41:8 Parallel

Isaiah 41:8 echoes the same redeemed Abraham and chosen Jacob, reinforcing God's covenant identity.

Isaiah 41:14 Related theme

Isaiah 41:14 reassures 'worm Jacob' with God's help, directly linking to the removal of shame promised in Isaiah 29:22.

Isaiah 45:17 promises Israel never to be ashamed, exactly parallel to 'no more shame' in Isaiah 29:22. Very close verbal parallel.

Isaiah 54:4 Parallel

Isaiah 54:4 directly promises no shame or disgrace, matching the assurance in Isaiah 29:22 that Jacob will no longer be ashamed.

Isaiah 61:7-11 directly echoes the no shame promise, promising double honor instead.

Isaiah 46:3 Parallel

In Isaiah 46:3, God's carrying Israel from birth reinforces His promise to Jacob of no more shame.

Isaiah 51:2 Related theme

Isaiah 51:2 points to Abraham as the father of the nation, grounding the promise of redemption in Isaiah 29:22 in God's call of Abraham.

Jeremiah 30:10 assures Jacob of no fear and restoration, paralleling the no shame promise.

Joel 2:27 Parallel

Joel 2:27 explicitly says 'my people shall never again be put to shame' — directly matching the assurance here.

Joel 2:26 Parallel

Joel 2:26 also promises 'my people shall never again be put to shame' — same promise of restored honor.

Genesis 48:16 recalls the Angel who redeemed Jacob, connecting to the same redeemer God who frees Abraham's descendants in Isaiah 29:22.

Joshua 24:2–3 Historical context

Joshua 24:2-3 recounts God taking Abraham from idolatry, providing the historical basis for the redemption mentioned in Isaiah 29:22.

Nehemiah 9:7 recounts God choosing and calling Abram from Ur, paralleling the redemption of Abraham here. Both highlight God's initiative.

Luke 1:68 Allusion

Luke 1:68 praises God for redeeming His people, echoing the redemption language. This NT fulfillment amplifies the OT promise of redemption.