Proverbs 10:30
The righteous shall never be removed: but the wicked shall not inhabit the earth.
Cross-reference
Psalm 16:8 uses the same 'not shaken' phrase, grounding stability in God's presence rather than righteousness itself.
Psalm 37:9 says those who wait for the Lord inherit the land, while evildoers are cut off — direct parallel.
In Psalm 37:10, the wicked will be no more — echoing the promise that they will not remain in the land.
Psalm 37:22 mirrors the contrast: the Lord's blessed inherit the land while the cursed are cut off.
Psalm 37:28 echoes preservation of the saints and cutting off the wicked, reinforcing the same security theme.
Psalm 37:29 directly states the righteous inherit the land and dwell forever, paralleling 'never be shaken'.
In Psalm 52:5, the wicked are uprooted from the land of the living — directly mirroring the fate of the wicked here.
Psalm 112:6 declares the righteous will never be moved, nearly identical to 'never be shaken'.
Psalm 125:1 compares those trusting in the Lord to Mount Zion, which cannot be moved — same concept.
In Micah 2:10, the wicked are told to leave the defiled land — directly matching 'the wicked will not remain'.
In Matthew 21:41, the wicked tenants are destroyed and removed from the vineyard — a NT parallel to the wicked being expelled.
In Micah 2:9, the wicked drive the righteous from their homes — in contrast to the promise that the righteous will never be uprooted.
2 Peter 1:10 urges diligence to confirm election to 'never fall' — parallels never being shaken, though conditional on practice.