Isaiah 48:17
Thus saith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit, which leadeth thee by the way that thou shouldest go.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 54:5 calls the Holy One of Israel 'your Redeemer', directly paralleling the same divine titles used in 48:17.
Isaiah 49:10 expands on God's leading, promising provision and protection along the way — a direct elaboration of this verse.
Isaiah 44:6-24 repeats the 'Redeemer' title and emphasizes God's sole sovereignty, echoing the self-identification in 48:17.
In Isaiah 43:14, the same title 'Redeemer, Holy One of Israel' appears, reinforcing God's identity as the redeemer who teaches and leads.
Isaiah 30:21 describes a voice saying 'This is the way, walk in it' — a direct parallel to God leading His people on the right path.
Isaiah 41:14 uses the same divine title 'your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel', reinforcing God's identity as redeemer.
Isaiah 54:8 again calls God 'your Redeemer' and adds that His everlasting love follows momentary anger — enriching the redeemer theme.
Isaiah 44:24 also calls God 'your Redeemer' and adds that He formed Israel from the womb, deepening the redemptive context.
Isaiah 42:16 expands on God's guidance, promising to lead the blind on unknown paths — a specific image of the leading mentioned here.
Isaiah 2:3 depicts God teaching his ways and guiding people to walk in paths, mirroring the teaching and leading promise of 48:17.
Isaiah 30:20 promises that your Teacher will not hide, reinforcing God's role as teacher mentioned in 48:17.
Isaiah 54:13 says all children shall be taught by the LORD, extending the teaching theme of 48:17 to future generations.
Isaiah 46:3 says Israel has been carried from the womb, echoing the sustained guidance and care of God mentioned here.
Isaiah 45:11 repeats 'the Holy One of Israel' and 'the one who formed him', emphasizing God as creator and questioner of his people.
Isaiah 43:15 calls God 'your Holy One, Creator of Israel, your King', adding creator and king to the redeemer title here.
Deuteronomy 8:18 states God gives power to get wealth, directly parallel to 48:17's 'teaches you to profit'.
Jeremiah 31:33 promises God writing his law on hearts — an internalization of the teaching that Isaiah 48:17 describes.
Jeremiah 31:34 describes the goal of God's teaching — all will know him directly, fulfilling the promise of divine instruction in Isaiah 48:17.
Micah 4:2 envisions nations seeking God to teach them his ways and walk in his paths — directly echoing the teaching and leading in Isaiah 48:17.
John 6:45 quotes 'taught by God' from the Prophets, linking divine teaching to faith in Christ — a direct echo of this promise.
Job 36:22 asks 'who is a teacher like him?' — directly echoing Isaiah 48:17's depiction of God as the one who teaches and leads.
Psalm 32:8 uses almost identical language: 'I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go.'
Psalm 25:9 says God leads the humble and teaches them his way — mirroring the guidance and teaching in Isaiah 48:17.
Proverbs 3:6 says God will make straight your paths when you acknowledge Him — parallel to being led in the way.
Psalm 143:8 asks God to 'make me know the way I should go' — an exact parallel to the leading in the way from Isaiah 48:17.
Romans 8:14 defines being led by the Spirit as sonship, directly parallel to God's leading described here.
Psalm 119:35 asks God to 'lead me in the path of your commandments' — directly echoing the leading in the way from Isaiah 48:17.
Psalm 107:7 describes God leading His people by a straight way to a city — a parallel image of divine guidance on the right path.
Luke 1:79 echoes this divine guidance, promising light and peace to those in darkness.
Psalm 78:35 also calls God 'redeemer' — here the people remember God as their Redeemer, echoing the title in Isaiah 48:17.
Psalm 25:12 promises instruction in the way for those who fear God — consistent with Isaiah 48:17's 'leads you in the way you should go'.
Genesis 24:48 attributes to God leading 'by the right way' to a specific destination — a historical example of divine guidance.
1 Kings 8:36 asks God to teach the good way to walk, echoing the guidance promise in 48:17.
Psalm 25:8 states God instructs sinners in the way — the same teaching and guiding role as in Isaiah 48:17.
Psalm 106:13 depicts Israel forgetting God's works and not waiting for His counsel — the opposite of being taught and led as in Isaiah 48:17.
Proverbs 2:9 promises understanding of righteousness and every good path — connecting to God leading in the way you should go.
Psalm 16:7 praises God for counsel and instruction, reflecting the teaching and leading promised here.
Psalm 71:17 recalls God's teaching from youth — personal experience of the teaching God described in Isaiah 48:17.
Jeremiah 6:16 calls people to ask for the 'good way' and walk in it for rest — echoing the guidance promised here.
Job 36:10 describes God opening ears to instruction, aligning with the teaching role claimed here.
In Job 22:22, receiving instruction from God echoes the teaching role in Isaiah 48:17 — both emphasize learning from God's words.
Psalm 73:24 speaks of God guiding with counsel — the same guiding role as 'leads you in the way' in Isaiah 48:17.
Psalm 119:7 speaks of learning God's righteous rules with an upright heart — a parallel to being taught by God.
Psalm 119:64 pleads 'teach me your statutes' — paralleling God's role as teacher in Isaiah 48:17.
Ephesians 4:21 speaks of being 'taught in him' — applying the divine teaching of Isaiah 48:17 specifically to Christ.