Jeremiah 15:2

And it shall come to pass, if they say unto thee, Whither shall we go forth? then thou shalt tell them, Thus saith the Lord; Such as are for death, to death; and such as are for the sword, to the sword; and such as are for the famine, to the famine; and such as are for the captivity, to the captivity.

Cross-reference

In Jeremiah 15:9, the remnant are given to the sword, matching one of the four fates.

Jeremiah 14:12 repeats the same triad of sword, famine, and pestilence, emphasizing that God will not accept their fasting or offerings.

Jeremiah 24:9 expands on the 'captivity' fate, describing it as being a reproach and a curse among all nations.

Jeremiah 24:10 again lists sword, famine, and pestilence as the judgments that will consume the people from the land.

Jeremiah 43:11 directly copies the formula 'such as are for death... captivity... sword', applying it to Egypt.

Jeremiah 52:15 Historical context

Jeremiah 52:15 describes the deportation of the people—fulfilling the captivity judgment threatened here.

Jeremiah 52:6 Historical context

Jeremiah 52:6 records the severe famine during the siege—directly fulfilling the famine judgment threatened here.

In Jeremiah 16:4, three fates appear: deadly diseases (pestilence), sword, and famine—a strong parallel to the four.

In Jeremiah 18:21, famine, sword, and pestilence are invoked in a curse—three of the four judgments repeated.

Jeremiah 29:17 warns of sword, famine, and pestilence for those remaining—echoing the same judgment triad threatened here.

In Jeremiah 9:16, the sword is sent after them, echoing the sword fate but adding scattering among nations.

In Jeremiah 12:12, the sword of the LORD devours the land, directly mirroring the sword fate from the fourfold judgment.

In Jeremiah 14:16, famine and sword are explicitly mentioned for the false prophets' followers—two of the four judgments.

In Jeremiah 22:26, being hurled into another country corresponds to the captivity fate among the four judgments.

In Jeremiah 19:7, the sword causes their fall, but no other fates are mentioned—only one of the four.

Ezekiel 5:12 lists pestilence, famine, sword, and scatter—closely mirroring the four fates of death, sword, famine, captivity.

Ezekiel 14:21 also names four judgments (sword, famine, beast, pestilence), paralleling the concept of multiple divinely sent calamities.

Revelation 6:3-8 depicts four horsemen bringing sword, famine, and death—mirroring the four judgments in this verse.

Revelation 6:8 echoes the fourfold judgment: sword, hunger, death, beasts—directly parallel to Jeremiah's death, sword, famine, captivity.

2 Kings 25:11 Historical context

2 Kings 25:11 records the Babylonian captivity—the historical fulfillment of the captivity judgment in this verse.

Ezekiel 12:11 declares exile as a sign—echoing the captivity judgment threatened here.

Deuteronomy 28:25 describes being smitten before enemies and scattered—fulfilling the sword and captivity judgments.

Ezekiel 7:15 describes sword outside and famine/pestilence inside—a parallel depiction of the judgments threatened here.

Ezekiel 14:13 warns of famine for a land that sins—paralleling the famine judgment threatened here.

Ezekiel 21:3 declares the Lord draws His sword against Israel—echoing the sword judgment threatened here.

Ezekiel 28:23 sends pestilence and sword, echoing two of the four judgments in Jeremiah 15:2. Moderate parallel on judgment types.

Ezekiel 33:27 lists sword, beasts, pestilence—similar to Jeremiah's death, sword, famine. Parallel judgment categories.

Leviticus 26:25 threatens sword and pestilence as covenant curses, matching the sword and death categories here.