Jeremiah 33:26
Then will I cast away the seed of Jacob, and David my servant, so that I will not take any of his seed to be rulers over the seed of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: for I will cause their captivity to return, and have mercy on them.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 33:7-11 expands on this promise, detailing the restoration of fortunes, cleansing, and joyful worship.
Jeremiah 33:20 likens the Davidic covenant to the fixed order of day and night — 33:26 concludes that God will not reject David's line.
Jeremiah 33:11 describes joy and thanksgiving at restoration — reinforcing the same promise of restored fortunes as 33:26.
Jeremiah 31:37 uses the same conditional logic: if creation can be measured, only then will God reject Israel—almost verbatim parallel within Jeremiah.
Jeremiah 31:20 echoes God's deep compassion for Ephraim, reinforcing the mercy promised to Jacob's descendants here.
Jeremiah 32:44 mentions restoring fortunes and buying land — a concrete example of the restoration promised in 33:26.
Jeremiah 30:3 explicitly promises return from captivity and restoration to the land — directly parallel to the restoration in 33:26.
Jeremiah 23:4 promises faithful shepherds — this connects to the Davidic ruler implied in 33:26, both about restored leadership.
Ezekiel 39:25 echoes this promise: God will restore the fortunes of Jacob and have mercy on the whole house of Israel.
Isaiah 14:1 parallels this promise: the Lord will again choose Israel and have compassion on them, settling them in their land.
Ezra 2:1 records the return from exile — the historical fulfillment of this promise to restore Jacob's descendants.
Zechariah 10:6 promises God will strengthen and save both Judah and Joseph, reflecting the same compassion for Jacob's descendants.
Romans 1:3 states Jesus was descended from David—directly fulfilling the promise of Davidic descendants as rulers.
Micah 7:20 affirms covenant faithfulness to Jacob and Abraham—the same patriarchs named here, reinforcing God's promise.
Matthew 1:1 identifies Jesus as son of David and Abraham—directly fulfilling the promise of Davidic descendants to rule.
Matthew 1:20 addresses Joseph as son of David, showing Jesus' legal lineage—fulfilling the Davidic ruler promise here.
Mark 11:10 acclaims the coming kingdom of David—echoing the restoration of Davidic rule promised here.
Acts 1:6 asks about restoring Israel's kingdom—the very restoration and Davidic rule this verse promises.
Ezekiel 37:22 promises one nation under one Davidic king — directly parallels the restoration of Jacob's descendants in 33:26.
Isaiah 55:3 affirms the everlasting covenant with David — both passages emphasize God's enduring promise to David's line despite exile.
2 Chronicles 13:5 mentions the covenant of salt giving David's descendants kingship forever — directly tied to the promise in Jeremiah.
2 Chronicles 7:18 records God's promise to Solomon to establish David's throne forever — the same covenant Jeremiah echoes.
2 Kings 19:34 says God defends Jerusalem for David's sake, reinforcing the enduring covenant Jeremiah 33:26 reaffirms.
2 Kings 8:19 states God spared Judah for David's sake, maintaining a lamp for his descendants — the same covenant faithfulness Jeremiah promises.
2 Samuel 23:5 records David's everlasting covenant, the same promise Jeremiah reaffirms — God will not reject David's line.
Isaiah 54:8 speaks of God's everlasting kindness after anger — the same mercy promised to Jacob's descendants here.
Genesis 49:10 prophesies Judah's lasting scepter—connecting to the Davidic offspring promise here, where David comes from Judah. The link is thematic.