Jeremiah 28:15
Then said the prophet Jeremiah unto Hananiah the prophet, Hear now, Hananiah; The Lord hath not sent thee; but thou makest this people to trust in a lie.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 28:11 is the false prophecy of breaking the yoke; verse 15 directly contradicts it, calling it a lie not sent by God.
Jeremiah 14:14 condemns prophets who speak lies in God's name — the same false prophecy theme that Jeremiah confronts in verse 15.
Jeremiah 29:23 accuses false prophets of lying words in God's name which He did not command—parallel to 'trust in lies'.
Jeremiah 27:15 states God did not send them and they prophesy falsely—identical condemnation of unsent prophets.
Jeremiah 23:21 echoes that God did not send these prophets; they ran on their own. Direct parallel to Hananiah's false claim.
Jeremiah 14:14 again condemns lying prophets not sent by God — identical theme to the false prophecy denounced in verse 15.
Jeremiah 29:31 uses nearly identical wording: 'I did not send him, and he has persuaded you to trust in lies.' Strong verbal parallel.
In Jeremiah 5:12, lying about the LORD saying no harm will come matches Hananiah's false peace message.
In Jeremiah 7:4, warning against deceptive words about the temple parallels trusting Hananiah's deceptive prophecy.
In Jeremiah 20:6, Pashhur is exiled for prophesying lies—same judgment as Hananiah.
In Jeremiah 23:32, God opposes prophets who lead people astray with reckless lies—directly parallel.
In Jeremiah 27:14, do not listen to prophets saying you will not serve Babylon—identical false assurance.
Jeremiah 29:32 pronounces punishment on Shemaiah for preaching rebellion—consequence of the false prophecy condemned in 28:15.
Ezekiel 13:22 accuses false prophets of lying and disheartening the righteous—parallel to causing trust in lies.
Lamentations 2:14 echoes this: false prophets see deceptive visions, failing to expose sin—same lie that misleads God's people.
Ezekiel 13:2 condemns prophets who prophesy out of their own imagination—unsent like Hananiah.
Ezekiel 13:3 calls foolish prophets who follow their own spirit—parallel to prophets not sent by God.
Zechariah 13:3 shows the penalty: speaking lies in God's name brings death—the very offense Hananiah committed.
Zechariah 10:2 condemns false divination and lying dreams — a clear parallel to false prophecy.
In Matthew 7:15, Jesus warns of false prophets who deceive, echoing Jeremiah's condemnation of Hananiah who made the people trust in a lie.
In 2 Corinthians 11:15, false servants face judgment matching their deeds — just as Hananiah's false ministry led to his death.
Deuteronomy 13:5 provides the law: false prophets who lead astray must die—the judgment Jeremiah pronounces.
Micah 3:5 condemns prophets who lead people astray for gain — mirroring Hananiah's false assurance.
Micah 2:11 describes a false prophet who deceives with lies — identical to Hananiah's deception.
In 2 Peter 2:1, false prophets arise among the people and face swift destruction — directly paralleling Hananiah's fate.
Ezekiel 13:9 pronounces judgment on false prophets with lying visions — reinforces the fate of such deceivers.
Ezekiel 13:6 directly identifies false prophets who are not sent by God — same core issue as Hananiah.
In Isaiah 9:15, prophets who teach lies are the same type as Hananiah—false prophets leading people astray.
Nehemiah 6:12 exposes a prophet not sent by God—identical situation to Hananiah's false claim of divine commission.
1 Kings 13:18 records a prophet lying in God's name—same deceit as Hananiah, leading another astray.
Deuteronomy 18:22 gives the test: a prophet's word must come true—Hananiah's failure proves him false.
Deuteronomy 18:20 defines a false prophet as one speaking without God's command—exactly what Hananiah did.
In Romans 16:18, Paul warns of deceivers who use smooth talk to mislead — similar to Hananiah's false prophecy that deceived the people.
In 2 Timothy 3:9, false teachers' folly becomes plain to all — like Hananiah's false prophecy was exposed by Jeremiah.