Jeremiah 31:14
And I will satiate the soul of the priests with fatness, and my people shall be satisfied with my goodness, saith the Lord.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 31:25 directly repeats the promise to satisfy the weary, reinforcing the same restoration theme.
Jeremiah 50:19 echoes the same promise of satisfaction and abundance, extending the restoration theme from Israel's leaders to the whole nation.
Psalm 36:8 uses feast on abundance imagery, directly paralleling the satiation of priests with God's goodness.
Psalm 63:5 describes soul satisfied with rich food, echoing the same language of satisfaction with God's provision.
Psalm 65:4 speaks of being satisfied with the goodness of God's house, directly paralleling the promise to priests.
Psalm 107:9 promises satisfaction for the hungry and thirsty, echoing the same divine goodness that fills God's people here.
Psalm 132:16 echoes God's promise to bless priests with salvation and joy, paralleling the satiation with abundance.
Isaiah 25:6 depicts the Lord's feast of rich food for all peoples, a parallel celebration of abundance and goodness.
Isaiah 55:1-3 calls the thirsty to come and eat freely, directly aligning with the promise of being filled with God's goodness.
Isaiah 66:10-14 describes drinking deeply from Jerusalem's abundant glory, matching the satisfaction of God's goodness here.
Zechariah 9:15-17 speaks of being full with wine and God's goodness, a direct parallel to the satisfaction promised.
Matthew 5:6 promises satisfaction for those hungering for righteousness, a spiritual parallel to being filled with God's goodness.
Nehemiah 9:25 recounts Israel being filled and reveling in God's great goodness, directly matching the language of satisfaction and fatness here.
Exodus 33:19 highlights God's goodness passing before Moses, a foundational revelation of the goodness Jeremiah promises will satisfy His people.
Deuteronomy 33:23 blesses Naphtali with being 'satisfied with favor' and 'full of the blessing of the Lord', mirroring the satisfaction Jeremiah describes.
Luke 6:21 promises satisfaction to the hungry, mirroring the Old Testament theme of God filling his people — a beatitude that parallels this promise.