Jeremiah 32:10
And I subscribed the evidence, and sealed it, and took witnesses, and weighed him the money in the balances.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 32:12 continues the narrative: Jeremiah gives the sealed deed to Baruch, directly continuing this transaction.
In Jeremiah 32:25, Jeremiah recalls this purchase command in prayer, highlighting the tension between God's promise of restoration and the present siege.
Jeremiah 32:44 echoes this act as a promise: fields will again be bought and deeds sealed in the restoration.
Jeremiah 32:14 instructs storing the sealed and open deeds in a jar for longevity, reinforcing the symbolic permanence of this purchase.
In Ruth 4:9-11, Boaz legally acquires a field with witnesses as a kinsman-redeemer—a parallel to Jeremiah's prophetic purchase as a sign of redemption.
Genesis 23:20 records Abraham's legal purchase of a field in Canaan as a first step of the land promise, echoing Jeremiah's purchase as a sign of restoration.