Isaiah 33:24
And the inhabitant shall not say, I am sick: the people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 44:22, God blots out transgressions — reinforcing the forgiveness of iniquity promised in this verse.
Isaiah 40:2 declares Jerusalem's iniquity pardoned—a direct parallel to the forgiveness promised in Isaiah 33:24.
Isaiah 58:8 promises rapid healing as a result of righteousness — a parallel to the removal of sickness and forgiveness in Isaiah 33:24.
Exodus 15:26 declares God as healer who removes diseases — the same divine healing promised in Isaiah 33:24 where no one says 'I am sick'.
In Deuteronomy 7:15, God promises to remove all sickness from Israel as a covenant blessing — the same healing promise echoed here.
In Deuteronomy 28:27, sickness is a curse for disobedience — the opposite of the healing promised here.
In Jeremiah 33:6-8, God promises to bring health and healing along with forgiveness of sin — exactly matching both parts of this verse.
In Jeremiah 50:20, iniquity is sought but not found because God pardons — a parallel promise of complete forgiveness.
Micah 7:19 echoes God casting sins into the sea—reinforcing the promise of full forgiveness in Isaiah 33:24.
1 John 1:7-9 explains that Jesus' blood cleanses from all sin—fulfilling the OT promise of forgiveness in Isaiah 33:24.
In Revelation 21:4, pain and death are eliminated in the new creation — the ultimate fulfillment of 'no inhabitant will say I am sick'.
Psalm 103:3 pairs forgiveness and healing together—directly matching both promises in Isaiah 33:24.
Jeremiah 31:34 promises forgiveness of iniquity and knowledge of God—expanding on the forgiveness in Isaiah 33:24 with a new covenant context.
James 5:15 links prayer, healing, and forgiveness of sins—reinforcing the connection between illness and sin in Isaiah 33:24.
Exodus 23:25 promises God will take sickness away—connecting to the healing aspect of Isaiah 33:24's 'no one will say I am ill'.