Isaiah 54:10
For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 51:6 contrasts vanishing heavens with God's eternal salvation—the same theme as departing mountains vs enduring covenant here.
Isaiah 55:3 echoes the same promise of an everlasting covenant and steadfast love, extending the invitation to all.
Hebrews 13:20 directly references the 'eternal covenant' and 'God of peace,' echoing the covenant of peace and steadfast love.
Romans 11:29 says God's gifts and calling are irrevocable—directly parallels the permanent covenant of peace promised here.
Psalm 46:2 uses 'mountains be removed' imagery to declare God as refuge—parallel to God's promise that His kindness will not depart.
Psalm 89:33 directly parallels the promise not to remove steadfast love—same Hebrew root *chesed* and same assurance.
Psalm 89:34 parallels the promise not to violate the covenant, reinforcing the same unbreakable covenant theme.
Matthew 24:35 declares Jesus' words will not pass away though heaven and earth do—mirroring the enduring covenant despite departing mountains.
In Genesis 9:9, God establishes the Noahic covenant—the very covenant of peace Isaiah declares will not be removed.
In Hebrews 6:17, God confirms His immutable purpose by oath — this verse declares His covenant of peace will never be removed.
Psalm 89:28 echoes God's steadfast love and covenant with David, reinforcing the promise that His love endures forever.
In Romans 3:3, Paul asks if human unbelief nullifies God's faithfulness — this verse affirms it never will.
Jeremiah 31:36 uses the fixed order of creation to guarantee Israel's endurance, mirroring the unshakable covenant theme.
Jeremiah 33:20 ties God's covenant with day and night to the Davidic covenant, reinforcing the certainty of God's promises.
2 Peter 3:10-13 describes heaven and earth dissolving by fire yet promises new creation—similar to mountains departing but covenant enduring.
Hebrews 8:6-13 describes a new covenant that fulfills the everlasting covenant promise, though with a shift from old to new.
2 Samuel 23:5 records David's everlasting covenant, matching the covenant of peace here—both emphasize God's unbreakable promise.
Matthew 5:18 says heaven and earth will pass away but the law endures—similar contrast to mountains departing yet covenant remaining.
Psalm 89:37 compares David's throne to the moon's enduring faithfulness, paralleling the idea of an unbreakable covenant.
In Job 14:18, mountains crumble as a symbol of transience; Isaiah contrasts that with God's permanent love.
In Deuteronomy 32:22, God's anger burns to the foundations of mountains—contrasted with the unshakeable covenant love here.
In Genesis 49:26, mountains and hills are emblems of eternal blessing; Isaiah says they may move but God's love outlasts them.
In Job 18:4, Bildad asks if the rock can be removed; Isaiah affirms that even if mountains depart, God's love remains.