Jeremiah 28:11
And Hananiah spake in the presence of all the people, saying, Thus saith the Lord; Even so will I break the yoke of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon from the neck of all nations within the space of two full years. And the prophet Jeremiah went his way.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 28:2-4 records Hananiah's original false prophecy that v.11 repeats with the symbolic yoke-breaking action.
In Jeremiah 28:15, Jeremiah directly confronts Hananiah, exposing his false prophecy as a lie that deceived the people — a stark reversal of the peace promised here.
In Jeremiah 23:17, false prophets say 'No disaster shall come' — directly parallel to Hananiah's promise of peace within two years.
Jeremiah 27:2-12 commands submission to Babylon's yoke—contrasting with Hananiah's promise that God will break it within two years.
In Jeremiah 29:9, God declares these false prophets are not sent — same condemnation applies to Hananiah's false prophecy.
In 1 Kings 22:6, 400 false prophets assure Ahab of victory — parallel to Hananiah's false assurance of liberation.
In 1 Kings 22:11, Zedekiah uses iron horns as a symbolic act — parallel to Hananiah breaking the yoke to dramatize a false prophecy.
2 Chronicles 18:10 shows Zedekiah using iron horns to falsely claim God's victory—parallel to Hananiah's symbolic yoke-breaking to falsely promise freedom.
Ezekiel 13:7 condemns false prophets who claim 'Thus says the LORD' without divine authorization—directly matching Hananiah's deception.
2 Chronicles 18:22 reveals that a lying spirit from God can inspire false prophets—explaining the source behind Hananiah's deception.
Amos 7:11 prophesies captivity for Israel, while Hananiah here proclaims liberation from Babylon — true prophecy versus false hope on the same theme of national fate.
In 1 Kings 13:18, a prophet lies claiming divine authority — similar to Hananiah's false claim that God will break the yoke.