Jeremiah 37:19
Where are now your prophets which prophesied unto you, saying, The king of Babylon shall not come against you, nor against this land?
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 28:10-17 shows Hananiah breaking Jeremiah's yoke and his subsequent judgment — confirming the false prophets' error and their fate.
Jeremiah 6:14 condemns false prophets crying 'Peace, peace' falsely, directly paralleling the false assurance here.
Jeremiah 8:11 repeats the indictment of false prophets saying 'Peace, peace' when there is no peace, echoing this verse.
Jeremiah 14:13-15 describes false prophets promising no sword or famine, exactly the false promise condemned here.
Jeremiah 23:17 condemns prophets saying 'No harm will come,' matching the false promise that Babylon would not attack.
Jeremiah 27:14-15 warns against prophets saying you will not serve Babylon, directly parallel to this false prophecy.
In Jeremiah 28:1-5, Hananiah prophesied Babylon's yoke would break within two years — the very false prophecy Jeremiah now recalls as unfulfilled.
Jeremiah 14:14 declares that prophets prophesy lies in God's name — exactly the indictment Jeremiah levels against those who said Babylon would not come.
Jeremiah 2:28 uses the same rhetorical 'where are...?' to challenge false gods, paralleling this question about false prophets.
Jeremiah 29:31 cites Shemaiah's false prophecy against Jeremiah — another example of a prophet whose words failed, echoing the same accusation.
Jeremiah 4:9 prophesies that prophets will be appalled when judgment comes — the outcome that vindicates Jeremiah's warning against false prophets.
Deuteronomy 32:37 uses the same 'where are...?' challenge against false gods, mirroring this verse's question about false prophets.
Lamentations 2:14 laments false prophets who gave deceptive visions of peace — directly matching the false assurances Jeremiah condemned.
Ezekiel 13:10-16 denounces prophets who whitewash the wall and cry peace when there is none — identical to the false peace proclaimed in Jeremiah's day.
Ezekiel 13:6 describes false prophets who see lying visions and claim the LORD sent them — mirroring the false prophets Jeremiah confronted.
Ezekiel 22:28 condemns prophets who daub with untempered mortar, seeing vanity and lies—the same false assurance Jeremiah rebukes.
Zechariah 10:2 says idols speak vanity and diviners see lies, giving vain comfort—same false hope Jeremiah confronts.
2 Peter 2:1 directly warns of false prophets among the people, echoing the lying prophets Jeremiah denounces here.
Ezekiel 13:2 commands prophesying against those who speak from their own hearts — a parallel charge to Jeremiah's confrontation of false prophets.