Isaiah 47:4
As for our redeemer, the Lord of hosts is his name, the Holy One of Israel.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 41:14 uses the same title 'Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel' to comfort Israel, echoing the identification here.
Isaiah 43:14 repeats 'your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel' exactly, connecting God's action against Babylon.
Isaiah 54:5 combines 'LORD of hosts' and 'Holy One of Israel' and 'Redeemer' — identical cluster of titles.
Isaiah 48:2 repeats the exact phrase 'the Lord of hosts is his name'—a direct verbal parallel.
Isaiah 51:15 uses the identical formula 'the Lord of hosts is his name,' echoing the divine title here.
Isaiah 43:3 calls God 'the Holy One of Israel, your Savior' — a parallel title to the Redeemer here.
Isaiah 44:6 also names God as 'Redeemer' and 'LORD of hosts', reinforcing the divine attributes.
Isaiah 49:26 calls God 'your Redeemer, the Mighty One of Jacob' — a similar redeemer title.
Jeremiah 50:34 says 'Their Redeemer is strong; the LORD of hosts is his name' — directly parallels the verse.
In Revelation 3:7, Christ is called 'the holy one'—the same title used for God in Isaiah 47:4, linking the Redeemer of Israel to Jesus.
Amos 4:13 ends with 'the Lord, the God of hosts, is his name'—a close variation of the divine title here.
Jeremiah 51:19 repeats 'the Lord of hosts is his name'—the same title as in Isaiah 47:4.
Jeremiah 46:18 declares 'whose name is the Lord of hosts,' matching the divine name proclaimed here.
Jeremiah 10:16 concludes with 'the Lord of hosts is his name'—the same phrase identifying God in Isaiah 47:4.
Jeremiah 31:11 speaks of God's redemption of Jacob, linking to the Redeemer title here.
Genesis 48:16 calls the Angel 'the one who has redeemed me'—the same 'Redeemer' title applied to God in Isaiah 47:4.
Psalm 19:14 calls God 'my redeemer'—sharing the same 'Redeemer' title found in Isaiah 47:4.