Jeremiah 33:25
Thus saith the Lord; If my covenant be not with day and night, and if I have not appointed the ordinances of heaven and earth;
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 33:20 is the same covenant with day and night, restated in 33:25 as part of the same promise to David and the Levites.
Jeremiah 31:35 uses nearly identical wording about God establishing day and night, reinforcing the same creative order.
Jeremiah 31:36 continues the same 'if this fixed order departs' logic, directly paralleling the covenant argument.
Genesis 8:22 establishes the fixed order of day and night after the flood, which Jeremiah 33:25 calls God's covenant with creation.
Genesis 1:14 is the original creation of lights to separate day from night, the foundation of the covenant here.
2 Samuel 23:5 calls David's covenant 'ordered in all things and secure,' which Jeremiah 33:25-26 ties to the cosmic covenant.
Job 38:33 similarly speaks of God's fixed ordinances for the heavens, mirroring the 'fixed order of heaven and earth' that guarantees the covenant.
Psalm 119:91 affirms that all things stand by God's appointment—highlighting the same creation-order stability that secures the promise here.
Psalm 148:6 states God established the heavens forever with a decree that never passes—reinforcing the unshakable covenant with day and night.
Psalm 104:19 describes the moon marking seasons and the sun its time, aligning with the 'fixed order' of creation.
Micah 7:20 points to God's sworn faithfulness to Abraham and Jacob—the same patriarchs named here, affirming covenant certainty through creation's order.
Hebrews 6:17 emphasizes God's unchangeable purpose guaranteed by an oath—echoing the oath-like covenant with day and night that makes the promise inviolable.
Psalm 74:16 declares that God owns the day and night and set the luminaries, echoing the established order here.
Psalm 74:17 adds that God fixed boundaries and seasons, supplementing the idea of a fixed cosmic order.