Jeremiah 33:6
Behold, I will bring it health and cure, and I will cure them, and will reveal unto them the abundance of peace and truth.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 30:17 promises restoration of health and healing of wounds—identical to the healing promise made here.
Jeremiah 17:14 is a prayer for healing—the very promise God now gives in this verse, forming a direct answer to that plea.
Jeremiah 30:17 says God will restore health and heal wounds — almost identical promise to the healing and peace in this verse, from the same prophet.
Jeremiah 30:13 says there is no healing for Zion's wound — a stark contrast to the healing that God promises to bring in this verse.
Isaiah 39:8 uses the exact phrase 'peace and truth' (shalom ve'emet) that appears here, linking Hezekiah's era to this promise.
Hosea 6:1 invites return because God heals after tearing—complementing this promise with the call to repentance as the proper response.
In Isaiah 66:12, God extends peace like a river — the same vivid imagery of abundant peace and prosperity promised here.
Isaiah 30:26 describes God binding up and healing His people after judgment—a very similar promise of restoration to the one here.
Psalm 85:10-12 pictures steadfast love, faithfulness, peace, and prosperity — the same blessings Jeremiah lists.
Deuteronomy 32:39 declares God wounds and heals—the same sovereign hand that now brings the healing promised here.
Isaiah 1:6 describes Israel's total lack of health — wounds unbound — contrasting sharply with God's promise in Jeremiah to bring healing and health.
Isaiah 33:24 envisions a day when no one says 'I am sick' — matching the complete healing and forgiveness that Jeremiah's promise of health entails.
Hosea 14:4 explicitly says 'I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely', directly echoing the healing promise here with identical language.
Isaiah 57:18 has God saying 'I will heal him' and restore comfort — directly parallel to Jeremiah's promise of healing and revealing peace.
Psalm 147:3 describes God healing the brokenhearted and binding wounds — directly parallel to the healing promise in Jeremiah.
2 Chronicles 7:14 promises healing of the land if God's people repent — directly parallel to the healing and restoration Jeremiah proclaims.
Exodus 15:26 declares God as 'the LORD, your healer' — directly parallel to the healing and health God promises in Jeremiah.
Exodus 34:6 reveals God's merciful character, the source of the healing and peace promised here.
Hebrews 6:17 highlights God's unchangeable purpose guaranteed by oath — reinforcing the certainty of the restoration promise in Jeremiah.
Hebrews 6:18 continues the theme of God's unchangeable promise as refuge and hope — parallel to the assured healing and security in Jeremiah.
Malachi 4:2 promises healing in the wings of the Sun of Righteousness, linking the healing here to the coming Messiah's work.
Hosea 7:1 shows God trying to heal but being thwarted by sin—contrasting with the unqualified healing promise made here.
In Hosea 2:14, God allures Israel and speaks tenderly, paralleling the promise here of healing and peace — both depict loving restoration.
In Isaiah 54:13, great peace is promised to Zion's children — here God pledges healing and peace to the same restored city.
In Isaiah 48:18, peace like a river is conditioned on obedience — here God promises healing despite failure, highlighting grace.
Isaiah 26:2-4 promises perfect peace to those who trust, paralleling the security offered here.
2 Chronicles 6:25 is Solomon's prayer for God to restore Israel after sin — parallel to Jeremiah's promise of healing and restoration.