Daniel 9:6
Neither have we hearkened unto thy servants the prophets, which spake in thy name to our kings, our princes, and our fathers, and to all the people of the land.
Cross-reference
Daniel 9:10 reiterates not obeying God's voice through prophets — directly reinforcing the same confession of ignoring prophetic warnings.
Daniel 9:8 repeats the same groups and shame for sin, reinforcing the confession of ignoring God's servants.
Jeremiah 29:19 says God sent prophets but they would not listen, directly supporting Daniel's confession of disobedience.
1 Thessalonians 2:15 identifies the same pattern: those who killed the Lord Jesus also killed the prophets and drove out the apostles.
Acts 13:27 shows that failing to understand the prophets led Jerusalem's rulers to condemn Jesus, fulfilling prophecy.
Acts 7:52 specifies that the fathers persecuted and killed the prophets who foretold the coming of the Righteous One.
Acts 7:51 directly accuses the audience of resisting the Holy Spirit and persecuting the prophets, just as their fathers did.
Matthew 23:37 laments Jerusalem's persistent pattern of killing and stoning the prophets God sent.
Zechariah 7:8-12 directly parallels the rejection of God's servants the prophets, with hearts hardened and refusal to hear.
Zechariah 1:4-6 echoes the same confession: God sent prophets but ancestors refused to listen, leading to judgment.
Jeremiah 44:5 states they did not listen or incline their ear — identical failure described in Daniel's prayer.
Jeremiah 44:4 says God sent prophets urgently, but the people did not listen — echoing Daniel's confession.
Jeremiah 32:33 says they turned their backs and would not listen to instruction — a direct parallel to ignoring the prophets.
In 2 Kings 17:13, the LORD sends prophets to warn Israel and Judah — the same sending Daniel confesses they ignored.
Jeremiah 26:5 states God sent servants the prophets, yet the people would not listen — reinforcing Daniel's admission.
Jeremiah 25:3-7 recounts the repeated prophetic warnings and Israel's refusal — the backdrop of Daniel's prayer.
Jeremiah 7:25 shows God sent prophets daily, highlighting the persistence Daniel's generation ignored.
In 2 Kings 17:14, the people refuse to listen and are stiff-necked — directly matching Daniel's confession of ignoring prophets.
In 2 Chronicles 33:10, God speaks to Manasseh but they pay no attention — echoes the rejection Daniel confesses.
In 2 Chronicles 36:16, people mock and scoff at God's prophets until wrath comes — the ultimate rejection Daniel confesses.
Nehemiah 9:34 explicitly confesses that kings, princes, priests, and fathers did not keep God's law, echoing Daniel's admission of ignoring prophets.
In Isaiah 30:10, people tell prophets to stop seeing visions — a specific demand to silence God's messengers.
In Isaiah 30:11, they reject the path and want no confrontation with God — parallels the refusal to listen in Daniel.
In Jeremiah 6:16, God offers the good way but they say 'We will not walk in it' — refusal to heed prophetic call.
In Jeremiah 6:17, God appoints watchmen but they say 'We will not listen' — direct parallel to Daniel's confession.
Jeremiah 7:26 describes the same stubborn refusal to listen, matching Daniel's confession exactly.
Jeremiah 44:17 shows the people defying the prophet by continuing idolatry, a direct example of not listening.
Jeremiah 3:25 confesses shame for not obeying God's voice, mirroring Daniel's confession of ignoring the prophets.
Zechariah 7:7 asks if the people heeded the former prophets, directly echoing the failure Daniel confesses.
Malachi 2:8 condemns priests who corrupted the covenant, a specific example of failing to listen to God's servants.
Matthew 21:34-40 illustrates the same rejection in parable form: servants (prophets) sent but beaten or killed by the tenants.
In 2 Chronicles 36:15, God repeatedly sends messengers out of pity — shows the persistent sending that Daniel's generation ignored.
Luke 20:10-12 tells the same parable of tenants beating the servants, representing the rejected prophets.
Jeremiah 34:19 lists the same groups (officials, priests, people) who broke a covenant, illustrating the disobedience Daniel confesses.
Nehemiah 1:7 confesses not keeping the commandments, similar to Daniel's confession but focusing on the law rather than prophets.
In Ezra 9:7, the same corporate confession of guilt from fathers, kings, and priests appears, though focusing on iniquities leading to exile.
2 Kings 21:9 says 'they did not listen' under Manasseh's evil leadership, paralleling Daniel's admission of not listening to prophets.
2 Kings 18:12 states Israel did not obey the Lord's voice, leading to exile — a similar pattern of disobedience as Daniel's confession.