Isaiah 30:19
For the people shall dwell in Zion at Jerusalem: thou shalt weep no more: he will be very gracious unto thee at the voice of thy cry; when he shall hear it, he will answer thee.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 65:24 intensifies: God answers before they call — a further development of immediate response here.
In Isaiah 25:8, God wipes away all tears and swallows death, expanding the 'weep no more' of Isaiah 30:19 to a universal hope.
In Isaiah 35:10, the ransomed return to Zion with joy and sorrow flees, directly paralleling the end of weeping in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 46:13, God declares salvation will not delay — reinforcing the immediate answer promised in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 60:20, mourning ends and God becomes Israel's everlasting light, a fuller expression of the comfort in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 61:1-3, the anointed one brings comfort to mourners and gladness, fulfilling the same hope as the 'weep no more' in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 65:9, God promises that his chosen shall dwell in Zion — directly echoing the dwelling-in-Zion theme from this verse.
Isaiah 41:17 promises God will answer the needy when they cry—a direct parallel to the answer promised here.
In Isaiah 40:2, the comfort is grounded in forgiveness and end of punishment, providing the basis for the 'weep no more' in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 10:24, God comforts Zion not to fear Assyria — a parallel promise of deliverance to the same people in the same setting.
In Isaiah 12:3-6, the response to salvation is joyful praise, aligning with the end of weeping promised in Isaiah 30:19.
In Isaiah 12:6, the inhabitant of Zion is called to shout for joy — the joyful response that follows the weeping-ends promise here.
In Isaiah 54:6-14, God promises lasting compassion and restoration to Jerusalem, echoing the gracious response in Isaiah 30:19.
Zechariah 1:17 explicitly says the Lord will again comfort Zion and choose Jerusalem, directly reinforcing the comfort theme.
Ezekiel 37:25-28 promises eternal dwelling, God's sanctuary among them, and peace—strongly echoing the comfort of no more weeping.
Zephaniah 3:14-20 commands rejoicing, declares God in their midst, and removes fear—directly fulfilling the 'weep no more' promise.
Jeremiah 31:9 echoes God's promise to lead with consolations — same theme of weeping turned to comfort.
Zechariah 8:3-8 depicts God dwelling in Jerusalem with peace and playing children, vividly echoing the end of weeping.
Luke 6:21 promises laughter to those who weep now — directly paralleling the comfort for weeping in Isaiah 30:19.
Revelation 7:17 promises God will wipe away every tear — a clear echo of the 'weep no more' promise in Isaiah 30:19.
Revelation 21:4 describes God wiping away every tear—the ultimate fulfillment of the promise that weeping ends here.
Jeremiah 29:12 assures that calling on God brings hearing—here He answers as soon as He hears.
Matthew 5:4 blesses those who mourn with comfort—here weeping ends because God answers the cry.
Psalm 6:8 shows God hearing the sound of weeping—the same response that here ends all tears.
In Jeremiah 31:12, people come to Zion singing aloud over God's goodness — a vivid picture of the joy that follows the weeping's end in Isaiah.
Zechariah 1:16 has God returning to Jerusalem with mercy to rebuild, paralleling the gracious response to cries.
Jeremiah 30:12 describes incurable wound — a stark contrast to the promise of answered cry and no more weeping here.
In 2 Kings 13:23, God's graciousness and compassion toward Israel is shown — a historical example of the grace promised in Isaiah's cry.
In Genesis 35:3, Jacob testifies that God answered him in distress — a personal example of the same promise of God responding to cries.
In Jeremiah 50:5, the people seek Zion to join the Lord in an everlasting covenant, echoing the dwelling and grace of Isaiah 30:19.
In Jeremiah 31:6, watchmen call people to go up to Zion to the Lord — a later expression of the same hope of gathering in Zion.