Jeremiah 22:19
He shall be buried with the burial of an ass, drawn and cast forth beyond the gates of Jerusalem.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 36:30 repeats the same prophecy: Jehoiakim's body cast out to heat and frost, confirming his ignominious end.
Jeremiah 26:23 shows Jehoiakim throwing Uriah's corpse into a common grave—poetic justice as Jehoiakim himself gets worse.
Jeremiah 19:7 foretells carcasses given as food to birds and beasts—matching the exposure of Jehoiakim's body.
Jeremiah 16:6 states both great and small will not be buried—a broader judgment that includes the king's own dishonor.
Jeremiah 16:4 describes people dying unburied, their carcasses left as dung—same imagery as Jehoiakim's fate.
Jeremiah 8:2 says bodies will be scattered and not gathered for burial—identical theme to Jehoiakim's disgrace.
Jeremiah 7:33 says corpses become bird and beast food—reinforcing the same fate of being left unburied.
Jeremiah 15:3 lists four destroyers including dogs and birds — similar to the dishonorable disposal of Jehoiakim's body.
1 Kings 21:23 prophesies dogs eating Jezebel — a dishonorable death like Jehoiakim's donkey burial, both for wicked rulers.
1 Kings 21:24 extends the same fate to Ahab's household — dogs and birds devour, echoing Jehoiakim's exposed corpse.
Isaiah 14:19 depicts the king of Babylon cast out of his tomb—a parallel judgment of a proud king denied honorable burial.
In 2 Samuel 18:17, Absalom is cast into a pit with stones — a dishonorable burial like the donkey's burial described here.
In 2 Kings 24:6, Jehoiakim is said to sleep with his fathers — contradicting the dishonorable burial prophesied here.
In 2 Kings 9:37, Jezebel's carcass becomes dung — even stronger parallel to being thrown out like a donkey.
In 2 Kings 9:10, dogs eat Jezebel with no burial — the same fate of being unburied as Jehoiakim here.
In 1 Kings 13:22, the disobedient prophet's carcass is denied his fathers' tomb — a direct parallel to Jehoiakim's burial denial.
In 1 Kings 11:43, Solomon is buried honorably with his fathers — the opposite of Jehoiakim's fate here.
Isaiah 34:3 describes corpses thrown out unburied in Edom's judgment—similar to Jehoiakim's exposed body.
In 2 Chronicles 36:6, Jehoiakim is bound and taken captive to Babylon, setting the stage for the dishonorable burial prophesied here.
In 2 Kings 21:18, Manasseh is buried despite his wickedness — a contrast to Jehoiakim's denied burial.