Jeremiah 36:30
Therefore thus saith the Lord of Jehoiakim king of Judah; He shall have none to sit upon the throne of David: and his dead body shall be cast out in the day to the heat, and in the night to the frost.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 22:18 explicitly states Jehoiakim's body will be cast out like a donkey, directly paralleling the exposure to heat and frost in this verse.
In Jeremiah 22:30, a similar curse is pronounced on Jehoiachin—no offspring to sit on David's throne—reinforcing the theme of dynastic judgment.
In Jeremiah 22:19, Jehoiakim's burial like a donkey matches the cast-out body here — both describe his dishonorable death.
Jeremiah 26:23 shows Jehoiakim casting Uriah's body out — now his own body suffers the same disgraceful treatment.
Jeremiah 8:2 depicts bodies of Judah's people spread before the sun, unburied—a broader judgment that includes the same exposure as Jehoiakim's.
Jeremiah 16:4 describes unburied bodies left as dung, a common curse for the wicked that aligns with Jehoiakim's exposed corpse.
2 Kings 24:6 says Jehoiakim 'slept with his fathers', a peaceful death record that contrasts sharply with this prophecy of his body being cast out.
2 Kings 24:12-15 records the exile of Jehoiachin, Jehoiakim's son, ending the dynasty and partially fulfilling the prophecy of no lasting heir.
Ecclesiastes 6:3 says a man with many children but no burial is worse than a stillborn, mirroring Jehoiakim's fate of having a son yet no proper burial.
2 Kings 9:35 describes Jezebel's unburied remains, a similar fate of a wicked ruler's body being exposed and dishonored.