Isaiah 40:5
And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 1:20 ends with the same phrase 'for the mouth of the LORD has spoken' — a repeated formula affirming divine authority in both promises.
Isaiah 6:3 declares the whole earth full of God's glory, directly paralleling the revelation of glory in 40:5.
Isaiah 35:2 also promises that people will see the glory of the Lord, reinforcing the same expectation.
Isaiah 52:10 says the Lord reveals His holy arm and all ends see salvation — closely parallel to glory revealed to all flesh.
Isaiah 66:23 echoes the 'all flesh' theme, showing universal worship of God in the new creation — a parallel promise of global revelation.
Isaiah 11:9 foretells the earth full of the knowledge of the Lord, paralleling the universal revelation of His glory.
Isaiah 53:1 asks who has believed the revelation, contrasting with the universal sight promised in 40:5 — few recognize God's arm.
Isaiah 49:6 speaks of the servant bringing salvation to all nations — extending the 'all flesh' theme to include Gentiles.
Isaiah 60:1 speaks of the glory of the Lord rising upon Zion, a specific fulfillment of the general revelation.
In Luke 2:10-14, the angel announces peace and glory at Jesus' birth — the fulfillment of God's glory being revealed to all.
Psalm 72:19 prays for the whole earth to be filled with God's glory, matching the prophecy of universal revelation.
Luke 2:32 identifies Jesus as the light for revelation to Gentiles — fulfilling the glory revealed to all flesh in Isaiah 40:5.
Luke 3:6 directly quotes Isaiah 40:5, applying it to John the Baptist's message of salvation seen by all flesh.
John 1:14 declares the Word became flesh and we saw His glory — the direct manifestation of the glory Isaiah promised.
John 12:41 says Isaiah saw Christ's glory when he spoke these words — confirming the glory revealed is Jesus.
2 Corinthians 4:6 says God shines light to reveal His glory in the face of Christ — echoing the revelation promised in Isaiah.
Hebrews 1:3 identifies Jesus as the radiance of God's glory — the personification of the glory Isaiah said would be revealed.
Habakkuk 2:14 almost identically speaks of the earth filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord.
Micah 4:4 concludes a promise of peace with the same formula 'for the mouth of the Lord of hosts has spoken', reinforcing divine authority.
Joel 2:28 promises the Spirit on 'all flesh' — a parallel outpouring that connects to the universal revelation of God's glory.
Luke 2:9 shows the 'glory of the Lord' appearing to shepherds at Jesus' birth, a first glimpse of the promised universal revelation.
Revelation 22:4 describes the final vision of God's face, the ultimate fulfillment of 'all flesh shall see' the glory.
John 2:11 records Jesus 'manifesting his glory' at Cana, connecting the revelation of God's glory to Jesus' signs.
Exodus 16:7 promises that Israel will 'see the glory of the Lord' in the manna, prefiguring the universal revelation of God's glory.
Revelation 21:23 shows the New Jerusalem illuminated by God's glory — the ultimate future fulfillment of all flesh seeing His glory.
John 17:2 speaks of Jesus' authority over 'all flesh' — echoing the scope of the glory revealed in Isaiah 40:5, now through Christ.
Acts 2:17 quotes Joel 2:28 about the Spirit on 'all flesh' — a parallel universal outpouring related to the glory revelation in Isaiah 40:5.
2 Corinthians 3:18 describes believers beholding Christ's glory and being transformed — applying the revelation of glory to the church.
Psalm 102:16 links the LORD appearing in glory with building Zion, a specific context compared to the universal scope.
Zechariah 2:13 calls 'all flesh' to silence before the LORD — a complementary response to the glory revealed in Isaiah 40:5.
Jeremiah 32:27 declares God as 'God of all flesh' — reinforcing the scope of His power over the same 'all flesh' that will see His glory.