Jeremiah 25:6

And go not after other gods to serve them, and to worship them, and provoke me not to anger with the works of your hands; and I will do you no hurt.

Cross-reference

In Jeremiah 7:6, the same command not to 'walk after other gods' appears as part of a list of social sins, reinforcing the warning here.

In Jeremiah 7:9, 'walk after other gods' is listed among sins, showing the same concern with idolatry as here.

In Jeremiah 35:15, the same commands to 'go not after other gods' and 'return from evil way' are repeated, highlighting the consistent prophetic message.

Jeremiah 44:8 repeats the same phrase 'provoke me to anger with the works of your hands' — a direct parallel warning of being cut off.

Exodus 20:3 Allusion

Exodus 20:3 is the first commandment—the foundational prohibition against other gods that Jeremiah echoes here.

Exodus 20:23 specifically forbids making idols of silver or gold, reinforcing the warning against provoking God with handmade gods.

Deuteronomy 6:14 uses nearly identical wording—'Do not follow other gods'—as a core command repeated throughout Deuteronomy.

Deuteronomy 13:2 addresses the danger of false prophets who entice Israel to serve other gods, a scenario Jeremiah's warning covers.

Deuteronomy 28:14 is part of the covenant blessings/curses, commanding not to turn aside to other gods—directly parallel.

Joshua 24:20 warns that serving foreign gods brings harm from God, exactly the consequence Jeremiah's conditional avoids.

1 Kings 11:4–10 Historical context

1 Kings 11:4-10 describes Solomon's heart turning to other gods, fulfilling the very sin Jeremiah warns against.

1 Kings 14:22 shows Judah provoking God with sins, using the same language of provocation Jeremiah uses for idolatry.

2 Kings 17:35 cites God's covenant command not to fear or serve other gods, reinforcing the longstanding prohibition.

Revelation 9:20 echoes 'works of their hands' for idols — showing unrepentant idolatry continues into the NT.