Jeremiah 4:5
Declare ye in Judah, and publish in Jerusalem; and say, Blow ye the trumpet in the land: cry, gather together, and say, Assemble yourselves, and let us go into the defenced cities.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 4:19 records the prophet's anguish upon hearing the same trumpet alarm he just proclaimed.
Jeremiah 4:21 questions how long the trumpet signal of war will continue — direct response to the alarm.
Jeremiah 35:11 shows the Rechabites obeying the same call to flee to Jerusalem for safety during Babylon's invasion.
Jeremiah 6:1 also commands blowing the trumpet and fleeing from the north's destruction — directly parallel to the alarm in 4:5.
Jeremiah 8:14 echoes the same gather-to-cities command, reinforcing the theme of divine judgment and futile flight.
Jeremiah 34:7 lists the fortified cities under siege by Babylon — the very invasion that the alarm in chapter 4 warned about.
Jeremiah 6:25 warns against going outside because of the enemy — consistent with the call to gather into fortified cities.
Jeremiah 5:20 repeats the same command to declare and publish in Judah — continuing the prophetic call to announce judgment.
Jeremiah 11:2 commands speaking the covenant words to Judah and Jerusalem — similar to the proclamation in 4:5.
Ezekiel 33:2-6 expands the trumpet warning into the watchman's duty to alert the people — reinforcing the urgency of Jeremiah's alarm.
Hosea 8:1 also commands 'set the trumpet' as a warning against covenant transgression — identical to Jeremiah's trumpet call.
Amos 3:6 uses the same trumpet-in-the-city imagery to assert that divine judgment follows the alarm — complementing Jeremiah's call.
Numbers 10:9 directly prescribes trumpet alarms in war for divine remembrance — identical to the alarm sounded in Jeremiah.
Ezekiel 33:3 uses the same trumpet-blowing imagery for a watchman warning of the sword—direct parallel to Jeremiah's alarm call.
Hosea 5:8 also cries 'blow the trumpet' in specific locations as an alarm—matching Jeremiah's call to sound the warning.
Joel 2:1 commands blowing the trumpet in Zion as an alarm for the coming day of the Lord—nearly identical to Jeremiah's call.
Ezekiel 7:14 echoes the trumpet call but shows it failing—none go to battle because God's wrath is on all. Contrasting outcome to Jeremiah's call.