Psalm 94:14
For the Lord will not cast off his people, neither will he forsake his inheritance.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 94:5, the wicked crush God's heritage — the very people He promises not to reject in v14, showing the contrast between oppression and divine faithfulness.
Psalm 37:28 echoes the same promise: the Lord does not forsake his saints, reinforcing the assurance here.
Psalm 37:25 echoes the same promise: the righteous are never forsaken, reinforcing God's faithfulness to His people.
Psalm 43:2 laments 'why have you rejected me?' — a direct contrast to the assurance in Psalm 94:14 that God will not reject.
In Isaiah 49:14, Zion laments being forsaken — the very fear Psalm 94:14 denies, creating a direct contrast between human perception and divine promise.
In Hebrews 13:5, the same promise is echoed: 'I will never leave you nor forsake you,' reinforcing God's commitment to His inheritance.
In Romans 11:1, Paul asks 'Did God reject his people?' and answers 'By no means!' — directly engaging the same question as Psalm 94:14.
In Romans 8:39, Paul concludes nothing can separate us from God's love — a direct NT parallel to the promise of not being rejected in Psalm 94:14.
In John 10:27-31, Jesus assures His sheep will never perish and no one can snatch them — the NT fulfillment of God's promise not to forsake His people.
In Jeremiah 32:40, God declares an everlasting covenant and that He will never stop doing good — directly parallel to 'will not reject' in Psalm 94:14.
Jeremiah 10:16 calls Israel 'the tribe of his inheritance' — reinforcing the identity of God's people as His possession He will not reject.
In Isaiah 49:15, God responds to the lament by affirming He will not forget — echoing Psalm 94:14's assurance of not forsaking His inheritance.
1 Samuel 12:22 gives the same assurance: God will not abandon his people for his name's sake, directly supporting this verse.
Deuteronomy 32:9 declares Israel is the Lord's allotted heritage — the same 'inheritance' God promises not to forsake in Psalm 94:14.
Leviticus 26:44 promises God will not spurn or destroy His people even in exile — directly parallel to the assurance in Psalm 94:14.
Isaiah 42:16 ends with 'I do not forsake them' — same promise of God's unfailing presence with His people.
Isaiah 41:17 promises 'I will not forsake them' — identical assurance to Psalm 94:14, applied to the poor and needy.
Jeremiah 33:24 records people claiming God has rejected His chosen — contrasting with Psalm 94:14's declaration that He will not.
Jeremiah 51:5 states 'Israel and Judah have not been forsaken by their God' — a direct affirmation of Psalm 94:14's truth.
Lamentations 3:31 says 'the Lord will not cast off forever' — a parallel promise of enduring compassion despite grief.
Isaiah 41:9 explicitly says 'I have chosen you and not cast you off' — a direct parallel to God not rejecting His inheritance.
Job 8:20 says God will not reject a blameless man — similar but conditional on blamelessness, unlike the unconditional promise to His people in Psalm 94:14.