Joshua 5:12

And the manna ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the old corn of the land; neither had the children of Israel manna any more; but they did eat of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year.

Cross-references

Exodus 16:35 explains manna lasted until they reached Canaan's border — here it ceases after eating the land's produce.

Deuteronomy 6:10 describes entry into the promised land — the very event where manna ceases and they eat from the land.

John 4:38 Parallel

John 4:38 uses the same principle of reaping where others labored—Israel ate Canaan's produce without planting it, just as disciples enter others' spiritual labor.

Exodus 16:15 introduces the manna that sustained Israel; Joshua 5:12 marks its cessation—a clear narrative bookend of God's provision in wilderness and land.

Psalm 105:40 recalls the manna from heaven that ceased here — the divine provision that ended when Israel ate Canaan's produce.

John 6:31 Typology

In John 6:31, Jesus references the manna that ceased here — using it as a type of the true bread from heaven.

Deuteronomy 6:11 promises enjoying houses, vineyards, and cisterns without labor—the same kind of provision Israel begins to eat from in Joshua 5:12 after manna ceases.

Numbers 15:19 commands a heave offering when eating the land's bread; Joshua 5:12 records the act of eating but omits the offering, a law-narrative parallel.

Nehemiah 9:20 recalls God giving manna in the wilderness — the same manna that ceased here upon entering the land.