Jeremiah 14:4

Because the ground is chapt, for there was no rain in the earth, the plowmen were ashamed, they covered their heads.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 14:3 immediately precedes: nobles also cover heads in shame — same scene of drought distress.

In Jeremiah 3:3, rain is withheld but people are shameless — contrast with the farmers' shame here.

In Leviticus 26:19, the same covenant curse makes the sky like iron and earth like bronze — directly parallel to the drought and cracked ground here.

Leviticus 26:20 says the land will not yield produce due to drought — directly matching the agricultural failure in Jeremiah.

Deuteronomy 28:23 describes the sky as bronze and earth as iron — a parallel curse of drought causing the ground to crack.

Deuteronomy 28:24 says the rain will become powder and dust — directly parallel to the no-rain and cracked ground in Jeremiah.

Joel 1:11 Parallel

Joel 1:11 also has farmers ashamed because the harvest is ruined — a direct parallel in wording and situation.

Joel 1:17 Parallel

Joel 1:17 describes shriveled seeds and dried grain — the same crop failure from drought as in Jeremiah.

Joel 1:20 Parallel

Joel 1:20 says the water brooks are dried up — directly parallel to the lack of rain causing cracked ground in Jeremiah.

Amos 4:7 Parallel

In Amos 4:7, God withholds rain selectively as judgment — same divine drought theme.

In Zechariah 14:17, withholding rain is punishment for not worshiping, echoing the drought imagery here as divine judgment.