Jeremiah 28:10

Then Hananiah the prophet took the yoke from off the prophet Jeremiah’s neck, and brake it.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 28:2 contains Hananiah's false prophecy of breaking Babylon's yoke; in verse 10 he enacts it physically, reinforcing the same false message.

In Jeremiah 27:2, God commanded Jeremiah to wear a yoke; here Hananiah breaks it, directly opposing God's symbolic message.

In Jeremiah 30:8, God promises to break Babylon's yoke in the future — contrasting Hananiah's false claim of immediate liberation.

In Jeremiah 37:19, false prophets who said Babylon wouldn't come are exposed — Hananiah's yoke-breaking is one such false prophecy.

In Jeremiah 36:23, Jehoiakim cuts and burns the scroll; both reject God's word by destroying the prophetic symbol.

In 1 Kings 22:11, Zedekiah makes iron horns to promise victory; both false prophets use symbolic acts to contradict God's true message.

In 1 Kings 22:24, Zedekiah slaps Micaiah; both false prophets physically attack the symbols or messengers of true prophecy.

In 2 Chronicles 18:10, Zedekiah makes iron horns (parallel to 1 Kings 22:11); same false prophet symbolism as Hananiah's yoke-breaking.