Jeremiah 10:2
Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way of the heathen, and be not dismayed at the signs of heaven; for the heathen are dismayed at them.
Cross-reference
In Leviticus 18:3, God forbids Israel from following the practices of Egypt and Canaan — the same prohibition against pagan ways echoed here.
In Leviticus 20:23, God commands Israel not to follow the statutes of the nations He casts out — the same warning against Gentile practices here.
In Deuteronomy 12:30, Moses warns against inquiring about how the nations served their gods and following them — the same prohibition against adopting Gentile ways.
In Isaiah 47:12-14, the astrologers and stargazers of Babylon are shown powerless to save — revealing the futility of the 'signs of heaven' Israel is warned not to fear.
In Ezekiel 20:32, God condemns Israel's desire to be like the Gentiles who serve wood and stone — directly connected to the command here not to learn their ways.
In Luke 21:25-28, signs in the heavens cause nations to fear, but believers are told to look up — contrasting with the Gentile dismay Israel is warned not to share.
In 2 Kings 16:10, Ahaz copies a pagan altar — a clear example of the 'way of the heathen' Israel is warned not to learn.
In 2 Kings 17:8, Israel is condemned for walking in heathen statutes — the very sin warned against here, leading to exile.
In Isaiah 2:6, Israel is rebuked for adopting soothsaying like the Philistines — a specific 'way of the heathen' Jeremiah warns about.
In Ezekiel 11:12, God says Israel did after the manners of the heathen — directly echoing this warning as a charge against them.
In Deuteronomy 12:31, the reason pagan practices are forbidden includes abominable acts like child sacrifice — revealing the moral corruption behind the 'way of the Gentiles'.
In Leviticus 19:26, God forbids divination and soothsaying — practices like reading signs of heaven that Israel is here told not to fear.
In Judges 6:10, God reminds Israel they disobeyed by fearing Amorite gods — the same warning against following heathen ways as here.
In Isaiah 41:29, idols are called 'vanity' — the same term Jeremiah uses for heathen customs, reinforcing their worthlessness.