Jeremiah 34:19
The princes of Judah, and the princes of Jerusalem, the eunuchs, and the priests, and all the people of the land, which passed between the parts of the calf;
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 34:10 shows the leaders initially obeyed the covenant before later breaking it, highlighting their faithlessness.
Jeremiah 21:7 foretells judgment on Zedekiah and his servants, directly connecting to the fate of these covenant-breakers.
Jeremiah 39:6 records the slaughter of Judah's nobles, fulfilling the judgment pronounced on the officials who broke the covenant.
Jeremiah 29:2 lists similar groups (king, eunuchs, princes) taken into exile, showing the same categories of leaders under judgment.
Ezekiel 22:27-31 describes corrupt princes, priests, and prophets who violate God's law, echoing the same leadership failure.
Genesis 15:10 describes the same covenant ritual of cutting animals in half that the officials reenact here.
In Genesis 15:17, God passes between the pieces to seal His covenant; here humans do, but they break it — a stark contrast.
2 Kings 24:12 shows officials of Judah surrendering to Babylon, similar to the fate prophesied for the covenant-breakers here.
In 2 Kings 24:15, officials of Judah are taken captive to Babylon, mirroring the judgment on those who passed between the pieces.
Zephaniah 3:3 calls princes 'roaring lions' and judges 'evening wolves,' illustrating the predatory leadership condemned.
Daniel 9:6 confesses that kings, princes, and people did not listen to God's prophets, paralleling the covenant-breaking leaders.
Daniel 9:8 acknowledges shame for kings, princes, and fathers who sinned, mirroring the guilt of leaders in Jeremiah.
Micah 7:1-5 depicts widespread corruption among princes and judges, similar to the covenant-breaking leaders in Jerusalem.
Zephaniah 3:4 accuses prophets and priests of polluting the sanctuary, paralleling the priests who broke the covenant in Jeremiah.