Jeremiah 32:4
And Zedekiah king of Judah shall not escape out of the hand of the Chaldeans, but shall surely be delivered into the hand of the king of Babylon, and shall speak with him mouth to mouth, and his eyes shall behold his eyes;
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 37:17, Jeremiah privately repeats to Zedekiah that he will be delivered to Babylon, echoing the prophecy in 32:4.
Jeremiah 38:18 reiterates that Zedekiah will not escape from the Chaldeans, confirming the same fate prophesied in 32:4.
Jeremiah 38:23 expands on Zedekiah's fate: his family taken and city burned, while he will not escape, consistent with 32:4.
Jeremiah 39:4-7 describes the actual capture, blinding, and exile of Zedekiah, fulfilling the prophecy in 32:4.
Jeremiah 52:8-11 gives another account of Zedekiah's capture and blinding, fulfilling the prophecy in 32:4.
Jeremiah 34:3 repeats almost verbatim the prophecy of Zedekiah seeing the king and being captured — a parallel within Jeremiah.
Jeremiah 39:5 reports the capture of Zedekiah and his being taken to Nebuchadnezzar — fulfillment of the prophecy.
Jeremiah 39:7 describes the blinding of Zedekiah — a detail of his capture, fulfilling the broader prophecy.
Jeremiah 52:11 recounts the blinding and imprisonment of Zedekiah in Babylon — another fulfillment account.
Ezekiel 21:26 continues the same oracle about removing the crown — reinforcing Zedekiah's downfall.
2 Kings 25:4-7 records the historical fulfillment of Zedekiah's capture, blinding, and exile as prophesied in 32:4.
Ezekiel 21:25 directly addresses Zedekiah as the wicked prince whose day of judgment has come, matching Jeremiah's prophecy about his capture.
Ezekiel 17:13-21 details Zedekiah's rebellion and the consequence of being brought to Babylon and dying there — same event as Jeremiah's prophecy.
Ezekiel 12:13 also prophesies Zedekiah's capture — he'll be brought to Babylon but not see it, contrasting with Jeremiah's 'see with his own eyes'.
Ezekiel 12:12-13 prophesies that Zedekiah will be taken to Babylon but not see it, an additional prophecy about the same event.
Ezekiel 17:16 confirms Zedekiah will die in Babylon because he broke the covenant — directly parallel to his fate stated here.
2 Kings 25:7 records the historical fulfillment: Zedekiah's sons killed before him, then blinded and taken to Babylon — exactly as Jeremiah foretold.
Ezekiel 17:15 describes Zedekiah's rebellion against Babylon by seeking Egypt's help — the provocation for the capture announced here.