Jeremiah 15:14
And I will make thee to pass with thine enemies into a land which thou knowest not: for a fire is kindled in mine anger, which shall burn upon you.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 15:4 attributes this judgment to Manasseh's sins, explaining the cause of the exile mentioned here.
Jeremiah 4:4 warns of wrath like fire with none to quench—the same burning anger imagery as 'my anger is kindled, it will burn'.
Jeremiah 16:13 echoes this same threat of exile to an unknown land where they serve other gods, reinforcing the judgment.
Jeremiah 17:4 repeats verbatim the threat of serving enemies in an unknown land with kindled fire.
Jeremiah 52:27 records the actual exile to Babylon, fulfilling the prophecy of serving enemies in an unknown land.
Leviticus 26:38 describes perishing among nations—the same covenant curse of exile that Jeremiah's audience faces.
In Leviticus 26:39, the remnant rots in enemy lands—matching the judgment of serving enemies in a foreign land.
Deuteronomy 28:36 speaks of being brought to an unknown nation to serve other gods—Jeremiah's phrase 'serve enemies in a land you do not know' cites this curse.
Deuteronomy 28:64 describes being scattered among all peoples—another dimension of the exile judgment echoed here.
Deuteronomy 32:22 says 'a fire is kindled by my anger'—almost verbatim to Jeremiah's 'my anger is kindled, it will burn'.
In Isaiah 42:25, God's anger is poured out as fire that burns — same 'fire kindled' imagery from Jeremiah 15:14, showing divine judgment.
In Isaiah 66:15, the LORD comes in fire with fury — echoing the kindled fire of God's anger in Jeremiah 15:14.
In Amos 5:27, the Lord declares exile beyond Damascus—the same threat of deportation to a foreign land.
In Nahum 1:6, God's wrath is poured out like fire, rocks broken — directly parallels the 'fire kindled' in Jeremiah 15:14.
In Hebrews 12:29, 'our God is a consuming fire' — a direct affirmation of the fire imagery used for God's judgment in Jeremiah 15:14.