Jeremiah 30:8
For it shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord of hosts, that I will break his yoke from off thy neck, and will burst thy bonds, and strangers shall no more serve themselves of him:
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 25:14, God says many nations will 'serve themselves of' Israel — the very exploitation that Jeremiah 30:8 promises will end.
Jeremiah 27:2 introduces the yoke of bondage as a sign — Jer 30:8 reverses it by breaking the yoke.
In Jeremiah 2:20, the same 'broken yoke, burst bonds' describes God's past deliverance that Israel squandered — highlighting the need for the future restoration in Jeremiah 30:8.
Jeremiah 28:4 is Hananiah’s false prophecy that God will break the yoke — Jer 30:8 is the true promise of the same.
Jeremiah 28:10 shows Hananiah breaking the yoke-bars as a false sign — Jer 30:8 is God’s true breaking of the yoke.
Jeremiah 28:13 warns that breaking the wooden yoke brings iron bars — Jer 30:8 promises God will break even those bonds.
Jeremiah 34:9 commands freeing Hebrew slaves — a historical act mirroring the future liberation from bondage promised here.
Isaiah 9:4 celebrates God breaking the yoke of oppression — Jer 30:8 promises a similar breaking for Jacob.
Isaiah 10:27 promises the yoke will be broken from the neck — directly paralleling Jer 30:8's breaking of bonds.
In Isaiah 14:25, the same 'breaking the yoke' image applies to Assyria's defeat — reinforcing God's promise to free His people from foreign domination.
In Nahum 1:13, God promises Judah to break Assyria's yoke — the same language of deliverance from bondage as in Jeremiah.