Psalm 132:11
The Lord hath sworn in truth unto David; he will not turn from it; Of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy throne.
Cross-reference
Psalm 89:33 assures God's steadfast love will not be removed despite discipline, reinforcing the oath's permanence in Psalm 132:11.
Psalm 89:4 promises to establish David's offspring and throne forever, matching the oath content in Psalm 132:11.
Psalm 89:3 declares God's covenant oath to David, directly parallel to the sworn oath in Psalm 132:11.
Psalm 89:49 laments the seeming failure of God's oath to David, contrasting promise with reality.
Psalm 89:29 directly repeats the promise: David's line established forever, throne enduring.
Both verses feature a divine oath God will not revoke—one on David's throne, the other on Melchizedek's priesthood. Thematic parallel of irrevocable promises.
2 Samuel 7:12 contains the original promise of a descendant on David's throne, which Psalm 132:11 later reiterates as a sworn oath.
Acts 2:30 directly quotes God's sworn oath to David about placing his descendant on the throne, citing Psalm 132:11 as prophetic promise fulfilled in Christ.
Luke 1:69 declares God raised a horn of salvation from David's house, seen as fulfillment of the Davidic oath in Psalm 132:11.
Jeremiah 33:20-26 declares the Davidic covenant as unbreakable as day and night, directly echoing the irrevocable oath in Psalm 132:11.
2 Chronicles 6:16 repeats the conditional Davidic promise from Solomon's prayer, reinforcing the foundational oath in Psalm 132:11.
1 Kings 8:25 cites the same Davidic promise with a condition of obedience, while Psalm 132:11 emphasizes the oath's irrevocability—parallel with nuance.
2 Chronicles 21:7 shows God's faithfulness to the covenant with David, preserving his dynasty despite judgment.
Acts 13:23 declares Jesus as the promised Savior from David's line, directly fulfilling the oath in Psalm 132:11.
John 7:42 explicitly states the Messiah comes from David's line, citing the very oath in Psalm 132:11.
1 Kings 1:46 reports Solomon sitting on the throne — direct fulfillment of God's oath in Psalm 132:11 that a descendant would occupy David's throne.
In Luke 1:32, Gabriel announces Jesus will receive David's throne, fulfilling the sworn oath in Psalm 132:11.
Matthew 1:1 introduces Jesus as 'son of David', directly linking him to the Davidic covenant and the oath in Psalm 132:11.
Jeremiah 33:25 affirms the certainty of the Davidic covenant by linking it to the fixed order of creation.
1 Kings 1:48 has David blessing God for granting a successor — acknowledging the fulfillment of the oath in Psalm 132:11.
Jeremiah 17:25 ties Davidic kingship to obedience, echoing the same covenant promise with a condition.
1 Kings 9:5 repeats God's promise of an enduring throne — directly echoing the oath in Psalm 132:11.
1 Chronicles 17:11 records God's promise to David of a son to succeed him — the same covenant oath as in Psalm 132:11.
1 Chronicles 29:23 describes Solomon sitting on the throne — direct fulfillment of God's oath in Psalm 132:11 that a descendant would rule.
2 Chronicles 1:1 shows Solomon firmly established as king — further fulfillment of the promise in Psalm 132:11 of a descendant on the throne.
2 Chronicles 7:18 reiterates the same Davidic covenant promise—God will establish David's throne forever.
1 Kings 2:4 recalls God's promise of a throne but adds a condition of obedience — expanding on the unconditional oath in Psalm 132:11.
1 Samuel 15:29 affirms God does not lie or change His mind, reinforcing the certainty of the oath in Psalm 132:11. Parallel on God's unchanging nature.
Hebrews 6:18 speaks of two unchangeable things by which God cannot lie, providing NT assurance that God's oaths are sure—parallel to the sure oath here.