Jeremiah 34:1

The word which came unto Jeremiah from the Lord, when Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, and all his army, and all the kingdoms of the earth of his dominion, and all the people, fought against Jerusalem, and against all the cities thereof, saying,

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 34:7 Historical context

Jeremiah 34:7 continues the same prophecy, naming cities still resisting during the siege.

Jeremiah 34:8–22 Historical context

Jeremiah 34:8-22 recounts a separate incident during the same siege—the broken covenant to free slaves—showing the people's unfaithfulness amid judgment.

Jeremiah 1:15 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 1:15 prophesied that northern kingdoms would besiege Jerusalem; its fulfillment is seen during Nebuchadnezzar's siege.

Jeremiah 27:5–7 Prophetic fulfillment

Jeremiah 27:5-7 declared that God gave all lands to Nebuchadnezzar; the event at Jerusalem executes that decree.

Jeremiah 39:1–3 Historical context

Jeremiah 39:1-3 describes the actual fall of Jerusalem that the siege led to—a direct fulfillment of the judgment.

Jeremiah 52:4–11 Historical context

Jeremiah 52:4-11 gives another detailed account of the siege and capture of Jerusalem, corroborating the event.

Jeremiah 1:3 Historical context

Jeremiah 1:3 provides the timeline of Jeremiah's ministry up to the siege — this event occurs within that timeframe.

Jeremiah 32:2 Historical context

Jeremiah 32:2 places Jeremiah in prison during the same siege, providing a parallel historical snapshot of the prophet's circumstances.

2 Kings 25:1–9 Historical context

2 Kings 25:1-9 records the same historical siege from the Kings narrative, providing an external parallel.

2 Chronicles 36:12–17 Historical context

2 Chronicles 36:12-17 chronicles Zedekiah's rebellion and the siege, complementing Jeremiah's account of the Babylonian attack.

Daniel 2:37 Parallel

Daniel 2:37 confirms that God gave Nebuchadnezzar dominion over all kingdoms — exactly the description here of his universal rule.

Daniel 2:38 Parallel

Daniel 2:38 identifies Nebuchadnezzar as the head of gold, ruler over all mankind — echoing the universal dominion mentioned here.

Daniel 4:1 Parallel

Daniel 4:1 shows Nebuchadnezzar addressing all peoples and nations — consistent with the scope of his dominion described here.

Daniel 4:22 Parallel

Daniel 4:22 states Nebuchadnezzar's dominion reaches to the ends of the earth — directly paralleling this verse's claim of universal rule.

Daniel 5:19 Parallel

Daniel 5:19 describes Nebuchadnezzar's absolute power over all peoples — the same universal dominion this verse attributes to him.