Jeremiah 18:9
And at what instant I shall speak concerning a nation, and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it;
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 1:10 uses the same 'build and plant' language — God commissions Jeremiah with authority over nations to build and plant, which 18:9 makes conditional.
Jeremiah 11:17 says God planted but decreed disaster due to evil — contrasts with the conditional building in 18:9 that can be revoked.
Jeremiah 31:4 repeats 'Again I will build you' — directly echoes the building language of 18:9 as a promise after judgment.
Jeremiah 31:28 contrasts plucking up with building and planting — the same pair of actions in 18:9, now shown as God's final watchcare.
In Jeremiah 32:41, God uses the same 'plant' imagery to promise permanent restoration, emphasizing His joy in doing good.
Jeremiah 30:18 promises restoration and rebuilding of Jacob's dwellings — a positive fulfillment of the building God intended, showing the conditional promise realized.
Jeremiah 31:38 fulfills this building promise with a specific prophecy of Jerusalem's reconstruction after exile.
Amos 9:11-15 expands on God's promise to rebuild David's fallen tent and plant Israel securely — a strong parallel to building and planting.
2 Samuel 7:10 explicitly promises to plant Israel in a secure place — a direct parallel to Jeremiah 18:9's planting language.
Psalm 80:8 uses the vine metaphor for Israel being planted by God — a direct parallel to the planting imagery in Jeremiah 18:9.
1 Samuel 2:30 shows God's conditional promise to Eli's house — a parallel to Jeremiah 18:9's context where God's good word depends on obedience.