Isaiah 66:10
Rejoice ye with Jerusalem, and be glad with her, all ye that love her: rejoice for joy with her, all ye that mourn for her:
Cross-reference
Isaiah 66:13 continues the same chapter: God's comfort to Jerusalem is likened to a mother's comfort, leading to joy.
Isaiah 61:2 proclaims comfort for all who mourn — the same mourners called to rejoice here when God restores Jerusalem.
Isaiah 61:3 promises oil of gladness instead of mourning — the transformation that enables the rejoicing called for here.
Isaiah 65:18 commands rejoicing over Jerusalem as God's creation — directly echoing the call here to be glad for the city.
Isaiah 51:3 explicitly promises joy and gladness in Zion, directly paralleling the call to rejoice in Jerusalem.
Isaiah 52:9 calls Jerusalem's waste places to sing for redemption, matching the rejoicing over Jerusalem in 66:10.
Isaiah 40:1 begins comfort for God's people, which underlies the rejoicing in Jerusalem's comfort in 66:10.
Isaiah 44:23 calls all creation to sing for the LORD's redemption — expanding the joy for Jerusalem here to cosmic celebration.
Isaiah 57:18 speaks of God healing and restoring comfort to mourners, which is the basis for their joy in 66:10.
Psalm 122:6 prays for Jerusalem's peace and blesses those who love her — directly matching the love and joy for the city here.
Psalm 137:6 vows to remember Jerusalem above all joy — showing the deep loyalty that motivates the call to rejoice here.
Revelation 19:7 calls for rejoicing over the Bride (New Jerusalem) — a typological fulfillment of the joy over restored Jerusalem in Isaiah.
Nehemiah 12:43 describes the joy of Jerusalem at the wall dedication—a direct fulfillment of the rejoicing Isaiah 66:10 calls for.
Romans 12:15 commands rejoicing and weeping with others — directly embodying the communal response called for in Isaiah.
Psalm 137:1 depicts weeping for Zion, the mourning that Isaiah 66:10 promises will turn to joy.
Ezekiel 9:4 marks those who mourn over Jerusalem's sins—the same mourners Isaiah 66:10 calls to rejoice.
Matthew 5:4 promises comfort to mourners, echoing the pattern in Isaiah where mourning over Jerusalem leads to rejoicing.
Luke 6:21 promises laughter to those who weep, similar to the reversal from mourning to joy over Jerusalem.
Luke 15:6 calls for rejoicing with the shepherd who found his sheep — a parallel to rejoicing with Jerusalem restored.
Psalm 48:2 celebrates Mount Zion as the joy of the earth, reinforcing the call to rejoice over Jerusalem.