Jeremiah 15:17
I sat not in the assembly of the mockers, nor rejoiced; I sat alone because of thy hand: for thou hast filled me with indignation.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 6:11 also speaks of being 'full of the wrath of the Lord'—the same overwhelming divine indignation.
Jeremiah 20:8 shows the prophet facing reproach and derision daily—the same cost of prophecy that isolates him from mockers.
In Jeremiah 16:8, God commands Jeremiah not to attend feasts — this verse describes his past obedience to that command.
Jeremiah 20:9 describes a burning fire shut up in the bones—an inner compulsion that parallels the indignation filling him here.
In Jeremiah 13:17, the prophet weeps in secret over Judah's pride — Jeremiah's solitary sitting here shares the same prophetic grief.
In Psalm 1:1, the blessed man avoids sinners' company — Jeremiah's isolation from revelers echoes this same separation.
In Psalm 26:4, refusing to sit with deceitful men matches Jeremiah's refusal to sit with revelers.
In Psalm 26:5, hating evildoers' assembly and not sitting with them mirrors Jeremiah's lone stance.
In Lamentations 3:28, sitting alone in silence under affliction parallels Jeremiah's solitary sitting here.
Ezekiel 3:25 depicts prophetic confinement—bound and unable to go out—mirroring the divinely imposed isolation described here.
In Lamentations 3:1, the speaker sees affliction from God's rod — Jeremiah here sits alone because of God's hand, both suffer under divine discipline.
In 2 Corinthians 6:17, God calls believers to separate from the unclean — Jeremiah's isolation models this separation.
Psalm 137 depicts exiles sitting and weeping by rivers—a posture of lament parallel to sitting alone in sorrow here.
In Daniel 7:15, Daniel is grieved in spirit from visions — Jeremiah is filled with indignation, both prophets experience inner turmoil.
In Ephesians 5:11, Paul commands no fellowship with darkness — Jeremiah had no fellowship with mockers; both avoid evil company.