Isaiah 61:5 Cross References
Isaiah 61:5
5: Foreigners will be your servants. They will feed your flocks and plow your fields and tend your vineyards.
Isaiah 60:10
- "Foreigners will come to rebuild your cities. Kings and rulers will send you aid. For though I have destroyed you in my anger, I will have mercy on you through my grace.
- Your gates will stay open around the clock to receive the wealth of many lands. The kings of the world will be led as captives in a victory procession.
- For the nations that refuse to be your allies will be destroyed.
- The glory of Lebanon will be yours--the forests of cypress, fir, and pine--to beautify my sanctuary. My Temple will be glorious!
- "The children of your tormentors will come and bow before you. Those who despised you will kiss your feet. They will call you the City of the LORD, and Zion of the Holy One of Israel.
Isaiah 14:1
- But the LORD will have mercy on the descendants of Jacob. Israel will be his special people once again. He will bring them back to settle once again in their own land. And people from many different nations will come and join them there and become a part of the people of Israel.
- The nations of the world will help the LORD's people to return, and those who come to live in their land will serve them. Those who captured Israel will be captured, and Israel will rule over its enemies.
Ephesians 2:12
- In those days you were living apart from Christ. You were excluded from God's people, Israel, and you did not know the promises God had made to them. You lived in this world without God and without hope.
- But now you belong to Christ Jesus. Though you once were far away from God, now you have been brought near to him because of the blood of Christ.
- For Christ himself has made peace between us Jews and you Gentiles by making us all one people. He has broken down the wall of hostility that used to separate us.
- By his death he ended the whole system of Jewish law that excluded the Gentiles. His purpose was to make peace between Jews and Gentiles by creating in himself one new person from the two groups.
- Together as one body, Christ reconciled both groups to God by means of his death, and our hostility toward each other was put to death.