Isaiah 58:14
Then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 33:16 promises dwelling on heights and secure provision — same imagery of God's blessing for the righteous.
Isaiah 1:19 promises eating the good of the land if obedient — same conditional blessing of provision and land.
Deuteronomy 32:13 has the exact phrase 'ride on the high places' and provision from rock — the original promise God fulfilled for Israel.
Habakkuk 3:19 uses 'tread on my high places' as a personal confession of God's strength — same imagery of exaltation.
Jeremiah 3:19 speaks of giving a pleasant land, a heritage most beautiful — echoing 'heritage of Jacob' as promised blessing.
Psalm 136:21 repeats the gift of their land as a heritage — same covenantal promise of land inheritance.
Psalm 135:12 states God gave their land as a heritage to Israel — directly matching the 'heritage of Jacob'.
Psalm 105:9-11 recalls God's covenant to give Canaan as an inheritance — the 'heritage of Jacob' referenced here.
Psalm 37:4 directly says 'Delight yourself in the LORD' — an exact verbal parallel to the condition here.
Job 22:26 uses the same phrase 'delight in the Almighty', echoing the promise of delight in the LORD here.
2 Samuel 22:34 uses the exact imagery of being set on high places — David's victory song parallels the promise in Isaiah 58:14.
Jeremiah 17:24 commands Sabbath observance with blessing, directly paralleling the Sabbath conditions and promises in Isaiah 58:14.
Exodus 31:14 warns of death for Sabbath breaking — the opposite outcome of the blessing in Isaiah 58:14 for honoring it.
Psalm 37:9 promises earth as inheritance to those who wait on the Lord — parallel to the heritage of Jacob promised in Isaiah 58:14.
Psalm 36:8 describes being satisfied with God's abundance, paralleling the 'feed you with the heritage' promise here.
Psalm 119:35 expresses delight in God's commands, echoing the delight in the LORD promised in Isaiah 58:14 for Sabbath keepers.
Job 34:9 quotes the wicked saying delighting in God is profitless — directly opposing the reward promised here.
Job 27:10 asks if the wicked delight in God — a negative mirror of the positive delight promised here.
Nehemiah 10:31 records the post-exilic covenant to keep the Sabbath — the kind of obedience that brings the blessings of Isaiah 58:14.