Jeremiah 28:3

Within two full years will I bring again into this place all the vessels of the Lord’s house, that Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon took away from this place, and carried them to Babylon:

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 28:6 records Jeremiah's ironic 'Amen' to Hananiah's prophecy — setting up the later confrontation.

Jeremiah 28:16 pronounces death on Hananiah for his false prophecy about the vessels — direct consequence.

In Jeremiah 27:16-22, Jeremiah prophesies the vessels will stay in Babylon until God's time—directly contradicting Hananiah's false promise of return in two years.

Jeremiah 6:14 Related theme

Jeremiah 6:14 condemns those who cry 'Peace, peace' falsely — Hananiah's promise of quick restoration is exactly that false peace.

Jeremiah 23:17 describes prophets promising peace to the stubborn — Hananiah's 'no disaster' promise fits this pattern.

Jeremiah 5:13 Related theme

Jeremiah 5:13 says false prophets are 'wind' — Hananiah's claim of vessels returning in 2 years is empty wind.

2 Kings 24:13 Historical context

2 Kings 24:13 records Nebuchadnezzar taking the temple vessels—the very event Hananiah falsely promises will be reversed in two years.

2 Chronicles 36:10 Historical context

2 Chronicles 36:10 describes the vessels being carried to Babylon—the historical fulfillment of the warning Jeremiah gave, contrasting with Hananiah's false hope.

Daniel 1:2 Historical context

Daniel 1:2 notes the vessels taken to Shinar—confirming the actual exile that Hananiah's two-year promise contradicts.

In 1 Kings 22:11, the false prophet Zedekiah uses symbolic iron horns to promise victory, echoing Hananiah's method of false assurance.

2 Chronicles 36:7 Historical context

2 Chronicles 36:10 records the vessels taken to Babylon—the historical event that Hananiah's two-year promise falsely claims will be undone.

Ezra 1:7 Contrast

Ezra 1:7 records the actual return of the vessels under Cyrus — a contrast to Hananiah's false promise of return in two years.

2 Chronicles 4:19 Historical context

2 Chronicles 4:19 lists the vessels Solomon made—the same ones later taken and promised by Hananiah, providing the origin of the items in question.

Micah 2:11 Parallel

Micah 2:11 speaks of a false prophet who utters wind and lies — Hananiah's pleasant prophecy of return is such a lie.