Jeremiah 17:17
Be not a terror unto me: thou art my hope in the day of evil.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 17:7 pronounces blessing on those who trust in the Lord — the same hope Jeremiah declares in his plea, showing faith in adversity.
Jeremiah 17:13 calls the Lord 'the hope of Israel' — directly echoing the same confession of God as hope in the day of evil.
Jeremiah 16:19 calls God 'my strength, fortress, and refuge in the day of affliction' — the same refuge language as 'my hope in the day of evil'.
Psalm 59:16 calls God a fortress and refuge in distress, directly mirroring Jeremiah's 'refuge in the day of disaster'.
Nahum 1:7 declares the Lord a stronghold in the day of trouble, closely paralleling Jeremiah's refuge in disaster.
Job 31:23 admits that calamity from God was a terror — echoing the same fear of divine judgment that Jeremiah pleads against.
Psalm 88:15 speaks of suffering God's terrors — reinforcing the theme of divine terror that Jeremiah asks to be spared from.
Psalm 88:16 mentions God's fierce wrath and terrors cutting off — intensifying the same experience of divine terror Jeremiah prays against.