Leviticus 26:3

If ye walk in my statutes, and keep my commandments, and do them;

Cross-reference

Leviticus 18:4 uses nearly identical language—'keep my statutes and walk in them'—establishing the same covenant condition of obedience.

Leviticus 18:5 adds the promise 'he shall live by them,' expanding the condition of obedience into a principle of life.

Leviticus 19:25 is a specific example: keeping the law about fruit trees yields increased fruit, fulfilling the general obedience-blessing pattern of Leviticus 26:3.

Leviticus 25:18 repeats the same condition and promise: keeping statutes leads to secure dwelling, directly echoing Leviticus 26:3's blessing for obedience.

Revelation 22:14 echoes the conditional blessing: those who keep God's commands gain access to the tree of life, mirroring Leviticus' promise for obedience.

Romans 2:7-10 applies the same principle: God rewards those who persist in doing good with eternal life, echoing Leviticus' conditional blessing for obedience.

In Isaiah 48:19, the promised blessing of numerous descendants for obedience mirrors the covenant blessings in Lev 26:3.

Isaiah 1:19 Allusion

In Isaiah 1:19, the same conditional promise appears: willingness and obedience bring enjoyment of the land's good — directly echoing Lev 26:3.

Judges 2:2 Contrast

In Judges 2:2, the angel rebukes Israel for not obeying — the exact opposite of the obedience required in Lev 26:3 to receive blessing.

In Joshua 23:15, Joshua warns that just as blessings came, so will curses for disobedience — the opposite side of the covenant condition in Lev 26:3.

In Joshua 23:14, Joshua testifies that God fulfilled every good promise — affirming that the blessings of Lev 26:3, conditioned on obedience, were kept.

Deuteronomy 28:1-14 is a full list of blessings for obedience, mirroring the covenant framework introduced by this condition.

Deuteronomy 11:13-15 elaborates the same conditional blessing: obedience brings timely rain and harvests, fulfilling the promise here.

Deuteronomy 15:5 sets the condition for economic blessing: strict obedience to God's commands, consistent with Leviticus 26:3's promise of blessing.

1 Kings 2:4 Parallel

1 Kings 2:4 applies the same conditional principle to David's dynasty: faithfulness leads to a perpetual throne, echoing Leviticus 26:3's covenant blessing.

Deuteronomy 11:27 condenses the same principle: blessing comes from obeying God's commandments, directly mirroring Leviticus 26:3's condition.

Jeremiah 7:23 restates the core covenant condition: obey God's voice to be His people and have well-being, directly echoing Leviticus 26:3's call to walk in His statutes.

Deuteronomy 7:12 rephrases the condition: listening and doing commandments results in God keeping covenant love, directly paralleling Leviticus 26:3.

Exodus 15:26 presents the same conditional promise: obedience brings healing and protection from disease, directly paralleling Leviticus 26:3's blessing formula.

2 Kings 21:8 echoes the same conditional promise: obedience to God's commands ensures continued presence in the land. Both rest on covenant faithfulness.

In Psalm 81:12-16, God laments Israel's disobedience and describes the blessings they would have received — echoing the conditional promise of Lev 26:3.

In Isaiah 48:18, God wishes Israel had kept his commandments, promising peace — the same blessings for obedience as Lev 26:3.

In Matthew 7:24, Jesus teaches that hearing and doing his words leads to security — a NT parallel to the obedience-blessing principle of Lev 26:3.