Jeremiah 29:19
Because they have not hearkened to my words, saith the Lord, which I sent unto them by my servants the prophets, rising up early and sending them; but ye would not hear, saith the Lord.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 6:19 also states that the people 'have not listened to my words', matching the charge in 29:19.
Jeremiah 7:24-26 directly parallels 29:19 with the phrase 'again and again I sent my servants the prophets' and the people's refusal to listen.
Jeremiah 25:3-7 also recounts the Lord sending prophets again and again and the people not listening, matching 29:19.
Jeremiah 26:5 uses the same phrase 'sent to you again and again' and the charge of not listening, directly parallel to 29:19.
In Jeremiah 32:33, the same imagery of God teaching repeatedly and people turning their backs reinforces the pattern of persistent rejection.
In Jeremiah 35:14-16, God explicitly contrasts the Rechabites' obedience with Israel's refusal to listen to prophets sent again and again.
Jeremiah 44:4 repeats the exact phrase 'again and again I sent my servants the prophets,' directly reinforcing the persistent divine message.
Jeremiah 44:5 continues the same passage, stating they did not listen or pay attention, mirroring that same rejection.
Jeremiah 7:13 uses the same 'again and again' language: God spoke but they did not listen, directly paralleling the rejection of prophetic words.
Jeremiah 25:4 uses the identical phrase about sending servants the prophets 'rising up early' — the same persistent call the people ignored.
Jeremiah 7:13 echoes the same complaint of God speaking repeatedly but the people not listening, as in 29:19.
Jeremiah 44:22 describes the outcome of this rejection — the LORD could no longer bear their deeds, bringing desolation.
Zechariah 1:4-6 recalls the same pattern: earlier prophets sent, ancestors didn't listen, and God's words overtook them.
Zechariah 7:11-13 describes stubborn refusal to listen to prophets, leading to God's reciprocal refusal to listen—a strong parallel to the rejection.
Daniel 9:6 confesses the same failure — not listening to the prophets sent to them, echoing Jeremiah's accusation.
Nehemiah 9:34 confesses that ancestors did not pay attention to God's commands, echoing the broader theme of disobedience to divine warnings.