Jeremiah 32:2
For then the king of Babylon’s army besieged Jerusalem: and Jeremiah the prophet was shut up in the court of the prison, which was in the king of Judah’s house.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 32:3 explains why Zedekiah imprisoned Jeremiah, directly linking to the imprisonment stated in Jeremiah 32:2.
Jeremiah 32:8 continues the narrative: Hanameel visits Jeremiah in prison, fulfilling God's word and the setting from Jeremiah 32:2.
In Jeremiah 33:1, the same confinement setting continues as God speaks to Jeremiah a second time in the courtyard of the guard.
In Jeremiah 37:21, Jeremiah is again placed in the courtyard of the guard, the same location as earlier, after being rescued from the cistern.
In Jeremiah 38:6, Jeremiah is thrown into a cistern located in the same courtyard of the guard, deepening the story of his imprisonment.
In Jeremiah 39:13-15, Jeremiah is released from the same courtyard of the guard after Jerusalem falls, concluding his confinement.
In Jeremiah 37:4, Jeremiah was still free among the people — highlighting the change to his later imprisonment here.
Jeremiah 39:15 places another prophecy in the same prison setting, confirming he remained confined during that time.
In Jeremiah 34:1, the same Babylonian siege is described, providing the historical backdrop for Jeremiah's imprisonment.
In Nehemiah 3:25, the same 'court of the guard' is a landmark during wall rebuilding, showing its lasting physical location.
Hebrews 11:36 lists imprisonment among faith heroes' sufferings — Jeremiah's situation exemplifies this pattern.