Jeremiah 36:25

Nevertheless Elnathan and Delaiah and Gemariah had made intercession to the king that he would not burn the roll: but he would not hear them.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 36:10 Historical context

Jeremiah 36:10 records Baruch reading the scroll in the temple—the same reading that the princes in verse 25 had heard and then pleaded with the king about.

Jeremiah 36:12 Historical context

Jeremiah 36:12 lists the same officials (Elnathan, Delaiah, Gemariah) who were present when the scroll was read, later pleading with the king.

Jeremiah 13:15-17 warns to listen and give glory before judgment falls — a call that the officials here echo but the king ignores.

In Jeremiah 26:16, officials declare Jeremiah innocent, a parallel intercession to protect God's word, though this one succeeds.

Jeremiah 26:22 Historical context

Jeremiah 26:22 mentions Elnathan son of Achbor, one of the officials here who urged the king not to burn the scroll.

In Acts 5:34-39, Gamaliel likewise intercedes to prevent harming God's servants, echoing the plea for the scroll.

Proverbs 21:29 describes the hardened face of the wicked — exactly Jehoiakim's response to the intercession here.