Jeremiah 14:13

Then said I, Ah, Lord God! behold, the prophets say unto them, Ye shall not see the sword, neither shall ye have famine; but I will give you assured peace in this place.

Cross-reference

In Jeremiah 1:6, the same 'Ah, Lord GOD' cry introduces his inadequacy as a prophet. Here he uses it again to protest false peace prophecies.

In Jeremiah 4:10, he also says 'Ah, Lord GOD' and accuses God of deceiving the people with false peace — directly echoing his complaint.

Jeremiah 5:31 condemns false prophets and the people's love for it, reinforcing the situation Jeremiah protests in 14:13.

Jeremiah 6:14 uses the exact 'Peace, peace, when there is no peace' that the false prophets in 14:13 proclaim.

Jeremiah 8:11 repeats the same indictment of false peace as in 6:14, showing a recurring theme.

Jeremiah 23:17 quotes the false prophets saying 'You shall have peace' and 'No disaster' — the same false assurance Jeremiah laments.

Jeremiah 28:2-5 records Hananiah's specific false prophecy of peace, exemplifying the general problem Jeremiah describes.

In Jeremiah 37:19, the people are asked where the false peace prophets are now — directly echoing 14:13.

In Jeremiah 5:12, the people say 'no disaster will come'—almost identical to the false prophets' claim here.

In Jeremiah 5:13, false prophets are wind, having no word from God—explaining why their promises are empty.

In Jeremiah 7:8, the people trust deceptive words—a direct echo of the false assurances given here.

In Jeremiah 28:9, the test for a true peace prophet is fulfillment — contrasting the false assurances in 14:13.

Ezekiel 13:10-16 similarly condemns prophets who cry 'Peace' when there is none, using the same metaphor of whitewashed walls.

In Ezekiel 12:24, God promises false visions will cease — a direct answer to the false prophets in 14:13.

In Zechariah 10:2, diviners give false dreams and empty consolation — echoing the false peace prophecies in 14:13.

In Zephaniah 3:4, prophets are called fickle and treacherous — directly paralleling the false prophets in 14:13.

In Leviticus 26:25, God threatens sword and pestilence for disobedience—directly opposing the false prophets' denial of these judgments.

In Lamentations 2:14, false prophets give deceptive visions — parallel to the false peace prophecies in 14:13.

In Isaiah 56:10, blind watchmen fail to warn—like false prophets here who ignore coming judgment.

In 1 Kings 22:6, false prophets assure Ahab of victory—a direct parallel to false prophets promising peace here.

In Ezekiel 33:8, the watchman must warn the wicked — a contrast to the false prophets in 14:13 who spoke peace instead.

In 2 Kings 6:25, a severe famine shows such judgments happen—contrary to the false prophets' claim of no famine.