Jeremiah 18:10
If it do evil in my sight, that it obey not my voice, then I will repent of the good, wherewith I said I would benefit them.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 7:23-28 describes Israel's disobedience and God's call to obey — the same condition for blessing that Jeremiah 18:10 states.
Numbers 14:22 recounts Israel testing God ten times and disobeying — the very pattern that leads God to withhold the promised land.
Numbers 14:34 spells out the forty-year punishment for Israel's rebellion — a concrete example of God relenting from good due to evil.
In 1 Samuel 2:30, God reverses His promise to Eli's house because they despised Him — directly illustrating relenting from good.
1 Samuel 13:13 shows Saul's disobedience costing him an eternal kingdom — God's intended good withdrawn because of evil.
1 Samuel 15:11 has God regretting making Saul king because he turned away — exactly the kind of divine relenting described here.
1 Samuel 15:35 repeats God's regret over Saul — reinforcing the pattern of God relenting from good when evil is done.
In Ezekiel 18:24, the same principle applies individually: a righteous person who turns to sin loses all past righteousness and faces death.
Ezekiel 33:18 reiterates that a righteous person who turns to injustice will die — mirroring God's conditional relenting from good here.
Zephaniah 1:6 lists those who turn back from following the Lord — the same kind of evil that causes God to relent from intended good here.
2 Samuel 12:9 shows David's evil in God's sight bringing judgment, illustrating the conditional principle of divine response to disobedience.