Jeremiah 31:25
For I have satiated the weary soul, and I have replenished every sorrowful soul.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 31:14 promises abundant feasting for priests and satisfaction, directly echoing the same theme of satisfying the weary soul.
Jeremiah 50:19 promises Israel's soul will be satisfied on good pastures — the same imagery of God replenishing the weary.
Psalm 107:9 declares God satisfies the thirsty and fills the hungry, a clear parallel to this promise of replenishing the weary.
Isaiah 50:4 describes sustaining the weary with a word—God’s provision for the exhausted, echoing the same divine refreshment.
Matthew 11:28 offers rest to the weary and heavy-laden—a direct parallel to God refreshing tired souls.
Luke 1:53 says God fills the hungry with good things—paralleling the satiation of the weary soul.
John 4:14 promises living water that forever quenches thirst—a parallel to God replenishing the languishing soul.
2 Corinthians 7:6 says God comforts the downcast—parallel to the refreshment of the weary in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 51:3 describes God comforting Zion's waste places — the same restoration and satisfaction promised to the weary soul here.
Ezekiel 34:14 depicts God as shepherd providing rich pasture and rest — a parallel promise of satisfaction for the weary.
Luke 6:21 blesses the hungry with satisfaction — echoing the same divine promise to replenish the weary soul.
John 16:20 promises sorrow will turn to joy — the same transformation from weariness to satisfaction as in this verse.
Matthew 5:6 promises satisfaction to those who hunger for righteousness—a parallel promise of divine filling for the spiritually needy.
Psalm 65:4 speaks of being satisfied with God’s house—a parallel of divine satisfaction, though more about temple worship than direct refreshment.