Luke 1:73
The oath which he sware to our father Abraham,
Cross-reference
Genesis 22:17 continues the oath with blessing and multiplying offspring—the specific promise recalled here.
Hebrews 6:17 directly states that God guaranteed his purpose with an oath, likely the same Abrahamic one.
Jeremiah 11:5 connects the oath to the promised land, showing its enduring relevance for Israel.
Psalm 105:9 recalls the same oath God swore to Abraham and Isaac, directly echoing the covenant foundation.
Deuteronomy 7:8 attributes Israel's redemption to God keeping the oath to the fathers—echoing the oath mentioned here.
Genesis 26:3 repeats the oath to Isaac, affirming it—the same covenant promise referenced here.
Genesis 24:7 recounts Abraham's recollection of God's oath to give the land—another instance of the same oath.
Genesis 22:16 records God swearing by Himself after Abraham's offering—the very oath Zechariah references here.
Deuteronomy 26:3 references the land oath sworn to the fathers, directly tying into the Abrahamic promise.
In 2 Kings 13:23, God spares Israel because of His covenant with Abraham — the same oath Luke 1:73 recalls as the basis for salvation.
In 1 Chronicles 16:16, the same oath to Abraham is recited in worship — it grounds God’s faithfulness in history.
In Nehemiah 9:8, the covenant with Abraham is recalled as fulfilled — confirming the oath Luke 1:73 declares as the basis for deliverance.
In Psalm 105:42, God remembers His promise to Abraham — the same covenant oath Luke 1:73 says He fulfills in sending the Messiah.
In Galatians 3:18, Paul contrasts law and promise, affirming that the inheritance comes through the promise to Abraham — the same oath Luke 1:73 recalls.
In Hebrews 6:13, God swears by Himself to Abraham — the very oath Luke 1:73 references as the foundation for salvation.
Exodus 2:24 shows God remembering his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, linking the oath to deliverance.
Leviticus 26:45 recalls God's covenant with the forefathers, reinforcing the promised relationship.