Jeremiah 31:36
If those ordinances depart from before me, saith the Lord, then the seed of Israel also shall cease from being a nation before me for ever.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 46:28 promises God will not make a full end of Jacob — same book, reaffirming Israel will not cease.
Jeremiah 33:20-26 expands the same argument: if day and night covenant can be broken, then Israel can be rejected—the fixed order guarantees the promise.
Jeremiah 33:25 repeats the same conditional: if the fixed order of heaven departs, then Israel would cease — directly reinforcing the guarantee.
Amos 9:9 uses the sieve image — God sifts but preserves every pebble — reinforcing the same guarantee that Israel won't be lost.
Amos 9:8 echoes God's promise not to utterly destroy Jacob — same assurance that Israel will not cease as a nation despite judgment.
Psalm 89:36 ties David's offspring to the sun's endurance — echoing Jeremiah's language about Israel's offspring enduring.
Psalm 89:37 adds the moon as a faithful witness — directly matching Jeremiah's fixed order of sun and moon.
Isaiah 54:10 assures God's covenant will not depart even if mountains do — directly parallel to Jeremiah's fixed order promise.
Psalm 148:6 declares God established the heavenly bodies forever — the very creation order Jeremiah invokes.
Isaiah 54:9 compares the new covenant to Noah's enduring promise — both use creation's stability as guarantee.
Romans 11:1 applies this promise to Paul's own identity, affirming God has not rejected Israel despite appearances.
Psalm 83:4 records enemies plotting to wipe out Israel's name — the very threat God's promise in Jeremiah 31:36 overrides.
Job 38:33 asks about the ordinances of the heavens — the same 'fixed order' Jeremiah 31:36 uses as the basis for Israel's permanence.
2 Kings 17:20 describes God rejecting and casting out Israel — the very judgment Jeremiah 31:36 promises will never lead to final extinction.
Psalm 72:17 uses the sun's endurance for the king's name — parallel to Jeremiah's fixed order guaranteeing Israel's permanence.
Deuteronomy 32:26 mentions God refraining from making Israel's memory cease — background to Jeremiah's unconditional promise.
Genesis 9:9 is God's covenant with Noah — a parallel commitment to the created order, but here the guarantee is for Israel's national endurance.
Psalm 102:28 promises secure offspring for God's servants — a thematic parallel to the enduring offspring of Israel.