Jeremiah 14:11
Then said the Lord unto me, Pray not for this people for their good.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 7:16 gives the same command not to pray for this people — identical prohibition.
Jeremiah 11:14 repeats the command not to pray for them — another echo of the same ban.
Jeremiah 15:1 says even Moses and Samuel could not change God's mind — reinforcing the prohibition on intercession.
Jeremiah 4:28 declares God will not relent from judgment, reinforcing why prayer is forbidden here.
Exodus 32:32-34 shows Moses' intercession was effective — contrast: here God forbids prayer for the people.
Genesis 20:7 commands Abimelech to have Abraham pray — contrast: here Jeremiah is told not to pray.
In Exodus 32:10, God similarly tells Moses to stop interceding for Israel after the golden calf, paralleling the prohibition to Jeremiah.
Deuteronomy 9:14 recounts the same event where God tells Moses to cease intercession, echoing the command to Jeremiah.
Job 42:8 shows God commanding Job to pray for his friends—a direct contrast to forbidding prayer in Jeremiah.
Lamentations 3:44 depicts a cloud blocking prayer, illustrating the same futility of intercession seen in Jeremiah.
Ezekiel 14:14 states even righteous intercessors cannot save a wicked nation, explaining why Jeremiah's prayer is useless.
In 1 Samuel 16:1, God tells Samuel to stop mourning for rejected Saul, a similar command to stop interceding.
Ezekiel 20:4 commands Ezekiel to judge Israel rather than intercede, similar to Jeremiah being told not to pray.