Psalm 95:11
Unto whom I sware in my wrath that they should not enter into my rest.
Cross-reference
Psalm 106:26 directly echoes the same divine oath: God raised his hand to swear that they would fall in the wilderness.
Hebrews 4:5 directly quotes Psalm 95:11 to argue that a Sabbath rest remains for God's people.
Hebrews 4:3 quotes Psalm 95:11 to contrast believers who enter rest with the disobedient who were excluded.
Numbers 14:23 records God's oath that the rebellious generation would not see the land, directly matching the oath in Psalm 95:11.
Numbers 14:28-30 elaborates God's oath that the generation would die in the wilderness, fulfilling the 'not enter My rest' of Psalm 95:11.
Hebrews 3:18 interprets the oath of Psalm 95:11 as applying to those who disobeyed, linking disobedience to exclusion from rest.
Deuteronomy 1:34 records God's angry oath against the wilderness generation, the same oath referenced in Psalm 95:11.
Deuteronomy 1:35 states that none of the evil generation would see the land, echoing the 'not enter My rest' oath in Psalm 95:11.
Hebrews 3:11 directly quotes Psalm 95:11, applying the warning about entering God's rest to the New Testament audience.
Joshua 5:6 recounts the same oath and its outcome: the wilderness generation perished because they disobeyed, unable to see the promised land.
1 Corinthians 10:5 directly references the same wilderness generation — God was not pleased, and they fell, fulfilling the oath.
Ezekiel 20:15 recounts the same divine oath — God swore the wilderness generation would not enter the land.
Deuteronomy 2:14 describes the fulfillment of that oath as the entire generation perished over 38 years, confirming God's sworn judgment.
Numbers 32:10 records the original event where God swore in anger that the rebellious generation would not enter the land, directly quoted in Psalm 95:11.
Exodus 33:14 records God's promise of rest through His presence — the very rest that the wilderness generation later forfeited by unbelief.
Jeremiah 31:2 speaks of Israel finding grace and rest in the wilderness, contrasting with the oath that denied rest to the rebellious generation.
Genesis 2:2 describes God's own rest after creation — the original rest that Israel failed to enter, as referenced in Hebrews 4.
Genesis 2:3 shows God blessing and sanctifying the seventh day of rest — the pattern of rest that Israel's unbelief prevented them from entering.