Jeremiah 26:4
And thou shalt say unto them, Thus saith the Lord; If ye will not hearken to me, to walk in my law, which I have set before you,
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 44:10 echoes the same phrase 'walked in my law' and the refusal to obey — a later instance of the same sin.
Jeremiah 17:27 gives a specific condition about Sabbath disobedience using the same 'if you do not listen' structure.
Deuteronomy 11:32 commands careful obedience to the law set before them — the same law Jeremiah warns must be followed.
Isaiah 42:23-25 describes failing to listen and walk in God’s law, leading to judgment — the same warning Jeremiah delivers.
In Nehemiah 9:26-30, the historical pattern of rebellion despite prophets mirrors the repeated disobedience Jeremiah faces—a reminder of earlier warnings.
In 2 Chronicles 7:20, the consequence includes the temple's rejection—the very judgment Jeremiah will soon announce for failing to listen.
In 2 Chronicles 7:19, the same conditional threat appears: if they forsake God's statutes, He will uproot them—exactly what Jeremiah is prophesying.
In 1 Kings 9:6, God warns Solomon that turning away from His commandments will result in Israel's rejection—a direct parallel to Jeremiah's covenant warning.
In Joshua 23:16, transgression brings God's anger and destruction—the identical consequence Jeremiah warns if they refuse to listen.
In Joshua 23:15, Joshua states the covenant principle that both blessings and curses will come, reinforcing the conditional threat Jeremiah repeats.
In Deuteronomy 32:15-25, the Song of Moses details Israel's rebellion and the ensuing calamities—a poetic foreshadowing of Jeremiah's warning.
In Deuteronomy 31:20, prosperity leads to turning to other gods, illustrating the specific circumstance that triggers the judgment Jeremiah proclaims.
In Deuteronomy 31:16-18, God predicts Israel's future apostasy and His hiding His face—the same covenant breach and consequences Jeremiah warns against.
Deuteronomy 29:18-29 warns against a heart turning away and the resulting curses — reinforcing the conditional warning in Jeremiah 26:4.
Deuteronomy 28:15-68 gives the full covenant curses — the precise background for Jeremiah's 'if you do not listen' threat.
Leviticus 26:14-46 lists the covenant curses for disobedience — the legal basis for the conditional warning in Jeremiah 26:4.
2 Kings 17:13 shows God warning Israel through prophets to keep the law — the same call Jeremiah repeats.
Nehemiah 10:29 describes a covenant oath to walk in God’s law — the same obedience Jeremiah demands.
Hosea 9:17 pronounces rejection for not listening to God — the same consequence warned here.