Leviticus 26:44
And yet for all that, when they be in the land of their enemies, I will not cast them away, neither will I abhor them, to destroy them utterly, and to break my covenant with them: for I am the Lord their God.
Cross-reference
Leviticus 26:11 earlier promised 'I will not abhor you' under blessing; verse 44 reaffirms that same commitment even in judgment.
Jeremiah 14:21 pleads 'do not break Your covenant,' directly appealing to the same assurance God gave in Leviticus not to abhor or cast away His people.
Romans 11:26 foretells all Israel's salvation as the ultimate expression of God's covenant faithfulness promised here.
Romans 11:2 explicitly cites God not rejecting His people, applying this OT promise to Paul's argument about Israel.
Ezekiel 16:60 recalls God's promise to remember His covenant and establish an everlasting one, reinforcing the same theme of covenant faithfulness despite unfaithfulness.
Ezekiel 14:22 describes survivors preserved from judgment, fulfilling this verse's promise that God would not destroy them completely.
Psalm 94:14 declares God will not reject His inheritance, restating the same promise found in this verse.
Psalm 89:33 echoes this promise of steadfast love—God's faithfulness to David mirrors His covenant with Israel, ensuring lovingkindness remains.
Nehemiah 9:31 recounts God's great mercy in not abandoning His people, a clear echo of this verse's assurance.
2 Kings 13:23 shows God's compassion and refusal to destroy Israel because of the covenant, directly illustrating this verse's promise.
Deuteronomy 4:29-31 reinforces God's covenant faithfulness, promising mercy when they repent, exactly as this verse promises not to reject them.
Psalm 89:34 declares 'My covenant I will not break,' a direct parallel to the Lord's assurance in Leviticus not to break His covenant with Israel.
In Jeremiah 4:27, the same promise of not making a full end despite total desolation echoes Leviticus 26:44's assurance.
Ezekiel 11:16 promises God will be a 'little sanctuary' for the exiles, directly echoing Leviticus 26:44's assurance of not being cast off.
Psalm 78:59 says God 'greatly abhorred Israel,' directly contrasting with Leviticus 26:44's promise 'I will not abhor them.'
Zechariah 13:9 shows God refining a remnant and reaffirming covenant — echoing Leviticus 26:44's promise not to break the covenant.
Lamentations 2:7 shows God abandoning His sanctuary — a severe judgment that fulfills the curses, while Leviticus 26:44 promises He will not utterly destroy.
Ezekiel 28:25 describes the regathering of Israel from the nations — a later fulfillment of the covenant promise that God will not break.