Jeremiah 15:20
And I will make thee unto this people a fenced brasen wall: and they shall fight against thee, but they shall not prevail against thee: for I am with thee to save thee and to deliver thee, saith the Lord.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 15:10 is Jeremiah's lament about being a man of strife, contrasting with God's promise to make him a fortified wall against opponents.
Jeremiah 1:18 uses the same 'bronze wall' imagery, reinforcing God's promise to make Jeremiah a fortified defender.
Jeremiah 1:19 repeats the exact promise: 'they will fight against you but will not overcome you, for I am with you.'
Jeremiah 20:11 expresses the same confidence: 'the Lord is with me like a mighty warrior', reinforcing the promise of protection.
Jeremiah 46:28 promises 'I am with you' and deliverance to Jacob, paralleling the divine assurance given to Jeremiah.
Jeremiah 1:8 is the original commission promise 'I am with you to deliver you', directly reaffirmed here.
Jeremiah 30:11 repeats the exact promise 'I am with you to save you' to Israel, mirroring the assurance given to Jeremiah.
Jeremiah 36:26 narrates God hiding Jeremiah from arrest, a direct historical demonstration of the promise that enemies will not prevail.
Jeremiah 38:28 records Jeremiah's survival through Jerusalem's fall, illustrating the protective presence promised in 15:20.
2 Timothy 4:17: 'The Lord stood by me and strengthened me' — a direct parallel to God's promise of strengthening and rescue in Jeremiah.
Psalm 46:7 declares the Lord of hosts is with us as our fortress, directly paralleling the bronze wall and divine presence here.
Acts 18:10 directly echoes 'I am with you' and adds protection from harm, paralleling the promise in Jeremiah 15:20.
Ezekiel 3:9 promises a hardened forehead like flint, echoing the bronze wall image of divine strengthening.
Isaiah 41:10 echoes the same divine assurance: 'I am with you... I will strengthen you.' Both promise God's presence and deliverance to His servants.
Isaiah 8:10 declares that plots come to nothing because God is with us, directly echoing the protection promised here.
In Psalm 129:2, the same assurance that enemies afflict but do not prevail directly echoes God's promise here.
In Ezekiel 3:8, God hardens the prophet's face against opposition — both are divinely fortified for conflict.
Isaiah 49:2 uses weapon/metal imagery for God's servant (sharp sword, polished arrow), paralleling the bronze wall imagery but highlighting proclamation rather than protection.
Romans 8:31-39 declares that if God is for us, nothing can prevail — a NT parallel to the invincibility promised here.