Jeremiah 30:24
The fierce anger of the Lord shall not return, until he have done it, and until he have performed the intents of his heart: in the latter days ye shall consider it.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 4:28, God declares He will not relent nor turn back, echoing the unrelenting anger that will not turn back here.
Jeremiah 23:20 is virtually identical — the same statement about God's anger not turning back until His intents are accomplished in the latter days.
Jeremiah 31:1 immediately follows with the restoration promise after the anger of 30:24, showing judgment gives way to covenant renewal.
Jeremiah 49:39 promises restoration of Elam 'in the latter days' — same eschatological phrase as in Jeremiah 30:24, pointing to future fulfillment.
Jeremiah 48:47 promises restoration of Moab 'in the latter days' — the same eschatological phrase as in Jeremiah 30:24, linking judgment to future hope.
Ezekiel 21:5 says God's sword 'shall not be turned back' — almost identical phrasing, reinforcing the irreversible nature of divine judgment.
Ezekiel 20:48 states 'it shall not be quenched,' directly paralleling Jeremiah's 'will not turn back' as a fixed judgment.
In Job 23:13, God is unchangeable and does what He desires—directly parallels the statement that His anger will not turn back until He accomplishes His intent.
Isaiah 14:24 echoes this same theme: God's plan will stand and be accomplished, just as Jeremiah says His anger will not turn back until His purposes are done.
Isaiah 14:27 asks 'who will turn it back?' directly matching Jeremiah's phrase 'will not turn back' — both affirm God's irreversible purpose.
Isaiah 46:11 declares that God will bring His purpose to pass and do it — the same certainty of accomplishment as in Jeremiah.
Hebrews 1:2 identifies the 'latter days' of Jeremiah 30:24 as the time of Christ's revelation, fulfilling the promise of understanding.
In Daniel 10:14, an angel brings understanding about 'latter days' — directly mirroring the promise in Jeremiah 30:24 that such insight will be given.
Isaiah 14:26 expands that purpose to the whole earth and all nations, showing the global scope of God's unalterable plan.
In 1 Samuel 3:12, God fulfills all He spoke against Eli—both emphasize God carrying out His declared purpose without fail.
In Hosea 3:5, 'latter days' sees Israel seeking God — a future repentance that coincides with the understanding promised in Jeremiah 30:24.
In Deuteronomy 31:29, 'latter days' warns of coming evil — aligning with the fulfilled judgment and eventual understanding in Jeremiah 30:24.
In Deuteronomy 4:30, 'latter days' describes Israel's future return to God — echoing the time of understanding in Jeremiah 30:24.
In Numbers 24:14, Balaam uses 'latter days' to foretell what Israel's enemies will face — a future revelation similar to the understanding promised in Jeremiah 30:24.
In Ezekiel 38:16, 'latter days' signals God's defeat of Gog — a specific end‑time event that matches the timeframe of understanding in Jeremiah 30:24.
In Daniel 2:28, 'latter days' reveals God's mysteries about kingdoms — underscoring that God discloses future events, as Jeremiah 30:24 says understanding will come.
In Micah 4:1, 'latter days' depicts the exalted temple drawing all nations — a vision of the era when Jeremiah 30:24 says understanding will unfold.
In Genesis 49:1, the same 'latter days' phrase introduces Jacob's prophecy about his sons, paralleling the promise of future understanding in Jeremiah 30:24.