Jeremiah 31:38
Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that the city shall be built to the Lord from the tower of Hananeel unto the gate of the corner.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 31:27 begins a restoration oracle with the same 'days are coming' formula — together they promise renewed planting and rebuilding.
Jeremiah 30:18 also promises the city will be rebuilt on its mound — the same restoration theme with specific boundaries here.
Jeremiah 23:5 uses the same 'days are coming' formula for a messianic king — part of the same restoration hope, now focused on rebuilding the city.
2 Kings 14:13 describes the destruction of the wall from the Ephraim Gate to the Corner Gate, contrasting with Jeremiah's promise of rebuilding.
Nehemiah 2 recounts the rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls — a historical fulfillment of this prophecy, with the Tower of Hananel rebuilt in Nehemiah 3.
Nehemiah 3:1 records the actual rebuilding of the Tower of Hananel, fulfilling Jeremiah's prophecy of Jerusalem's restoration.
Nehemiah 12:30-40 describes the dedication of the rebuilt wall, including the Tower of Hananel — a direct historical fulfillment.
Nehemiah 12:39 mentions the Tower of Hananel in the dedication procession, confirming the city's restored boundaries.
Daniel 9:25 references the decree to restore and build Jerusalem — directly building on this prophecy from Jeremiah.
2 Chronicles 25:23 recounts the same destruction of the Corner Gate as 2 Kings, contrasting sharply with the rebuilding prophecy.
Amos 9:14 specifically says they will rebuild ruined cities — a direct parallel to rebuilding Jerusalem from the Tower of Hananel.
Isaiah 44:28 also prophesies Jerusalem's rebuilding through Cyrus — a parallel promise of restoration with a different human agent.
Ezekiel 48:30-35 describes the gates of the restored city in a visionary way — a parallel prophetic vision of Jerusalem's rebuilding.
2 Chronicles 26:9 records Uzziah's earlier construction at the Corner Gate, serving as a historical precedent for the promised rebuild.
Ezekiel 36:11 promises repopulation and restoration of cities, complementing the rebuilding of Jerusalem here.
Zechariah 2:4 describes Jerusalem inhabited without walls, expanding on the city's restoration but from a different angle.