Jeremiah 33:14
Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will perform that good thing which I have promised unto the house of Israel and to the house of Judah.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 32:38-41 details the everlasting covenant and God's commitment to do good, fulfilling the promise.
Jeremiah 23:5 uses the same opening and specifies the promised 'good thing' as the righteous Davidic King.
Jeremiah 29:10 specifies the 'good word' as the return from exile, showing the immediate fulfillment of the promise.
Jeremiah 31:27 uses the same opening and promises repopulation, another aspect of the 'good thing'.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 uses the same opening and reveals the new covenant as the ultimate good thing promised.
Jeremiah 30:3 contains the same promise of restoration — bringing back Israel and Judah — which Jeremiah 33:14 reaffirms as the 'good thing'.
Jeremiah 31:1 echoes the covenant formula 'I will be their God', reinforcing the same restoration promise for Israel and Judah.
Amos 9:11 promises to raise up David's fallen booth—the same restoration of the Davidic dynasty Jeremiah's righteous Branch fulfills.
Ezekiel 34:23-25 prophesies a Davidic shepherd who will bring peace — the same servant David promised in Jeremiah.
Micah 5:2 specifies Bethlehem as the birthplace of the coming ruler from David's line, pinpointing where Jeremiah's promised Branch appears.
Zechariah 9:9 portrays the righteous king arriving humbly on a donkey—the very king Jeremiah promised to David's throne.
Luke 1:69 declares God raised a horn of salvation from David's house—the direct fulfillment of Jeremiah's promised righteous Branch.
Luke 2:11 declares Jesus born as Messiah and Savior — the specific fulfillment of the 'good thing' Jeremiah promised to God's people.
Acts 13:32 proclaims that God has fulfilled the promise made to the fathers — precisely the 'good thing' Jeremiah spoke of.
Acts 13:33 identifies the resurrection of Jesus as the fulfillment of the promise — the 'good thing' Jeremiah foretold for Israel.
2 Corinthians 1:20 declares that all God's promises, including Jeremiah's, find their 'Yes' in Christ — the ultimate fulfillment.
1 Peter 1:10 confirms that the prophets, like Jeremiah, spoke of the grace and salvation that would come — the 'good thing' he promised.
Daniel 7:14 gives that son of man everlasting dominion and a kingdom — directly parallel to Jeremiah's promise of an eternal throne.
Daniel 2:44 foretells an everlasting kingdom set up by God — matching the eternal dynasty promised in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 32:1 envisions a king reigning in righteousness — the same righteous Branch God promises in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 9:7 explicitly links this ruler to David's throne and an eternal kingdom — directly matching Jeremiah's promise.
Isaiah 9:6 describes the birth of a son who will rule — the messianic king fulfilling Jeremiah's promised righteous Branch.
1 Chronicles 17:14 records God's covenant with David that Jeremiah references — the promise of an eternal throne.
1 Chronicles 17 records God's covenant with David for an everlasting throne, which Jeremiah's promise of a good thing fulfills.
Ezekiel 37:22 adds the reunification of Israel and Judah under one king, fulfilling the same promise of a united future.
Genesis 49:10 promises a ruler from Judah, which the Davidic king in Jeremiah's prophecy (the good thing) fulfills.