Jeremiah 3:9
And it came to pass through the lightness of her whoredom, that she defiled the land, and committed adultery with stones and with stocks.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 3:2 accuses Judah of polluting the land with whoredoms — the same defilement here with stones and stocks.
Jeremiah 3:1 continues the same chapter's theme: Israel's harlotry and pollution of the land.
Jeremiah 2:7 says Israel defiled God's land — the same defilement referenced here through idolatry with stones and stocks.
Jeremiah 2:27 depicts Israel calling a stock 'father' and stone 'mother' — the very stones and stocks used as idols here.
Jeremiah 16:18 speaks of defiling the land with abominations, similar to the pollution here.
Jeremiah 10:8 calls the idol 'stock' a doctrine of vanities — echoing the foolish worship of stones and stocks here.
Habakkuk 2:19 mocks idols of wood and stone, echoing the 'stones and trees' used in Israel's adultery here.
Hosea 4:12 says people ask counsel from a stock and commit whoredom — directly parallel to the adultery with stocks here.
Ezekiel 16:17 tells of making images from God's gifts and committing whoredom with them — parallel to the adultery with stones and stocks here.
Isaiah 57:6 describes offering to smooth stones — the same stone worship condemned here as adultery with stones.
Ezekiel 8:10 shows idolatrous images in the temple, a visual parallel to Israel's spiritual adultery.
2 Chronicles 21:13 accuses Judah of 'going a whoring' like Ahab, matching the adultery imagery.
Ezekiel 16:32 depicts Israel as an adulterous wife, directly mirroring the adultery metaphor.
Ezekiel 20:18 warns against defiling oneself with idols, reinforcing the pollution theme here.
Ezekiel 36:17 describes Israel defiling the land by their ways, as in this verse's 'polluted the land'.
Hosea 1:2 similarly describes the land committing great whoredom, reinforcing the metaphor of spiritual adultery seen here.
Hosea 2:2 calls the unfaithful wife to renounce her whoredoms, echoing the same charge against Israel in this verse.
Judges 8:33 also describes Israel 'whoring after Baalim', directly paralleling the idolatry here.
Exodus 34:15 uses the same 'whoring after gods' metaphor for covenant unfaithfulness.