Jeremiah 4:8
For this gird you with sackcloth, lament and howl: for the fierce anger of the Lord is not turned back from us.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 6:26 repeats the call to gird with sackcloth and mourn bitterly — same phrase and context of judgment.
Jeremiah 49:3 commands wailing and sackcloth almost verbatim, applying the same mourning response to Ammon's judgment.
Jeremiah 25:34 commands shepherds to wail and wallow in ashes, a parallel call to mourn God's judgment.
In Jeremiah 48:20, a similar call to wail is issued over Moab's destruction, showing a recurring pattern of lament for divine judgment on nations.
Jeremiah 25:36 describes the wailing of shepherds as judgment comes, reinforcing the theme of lament in response to God's anger.
In Isaiah 9:12, the same refrain 'his anger is not turned away' appears after describing foreign invasion, matching Jeremiah's statement.
In Amos 8:10, the same imagery of sackcloth and lamentation appears as divine judgment, echoing Jeremiah's call to mourning for God's anger.
Joel 2:13 contrasts outward sackcloth with inward heart-rending — calling for genuine repentance beyond the ritual Jeremiah describes.
Joel 2:12 calls for turning to God with fasting and weeping — the same inward response to God's anger Jeremiah urges.
In Ezekiel 21:12, the prophet is commanded to cry out and wail over judgment against Israel, similar to Jeremiah's call to lament God's anger.
Isaiah 22:12 records God calling Jerusalem to weeping and sackcloth — the same call to mourning for Judah.
In Isaiah 13:6, the same urgent call to wail is tied to the approaching day of the LORD, paralleling Jeremiah's lament over God's fierce anger.
In Isaiah 9:21, the repeated refrain 'his anger is not turned away' concludes a cycle of judgment, directly paralleling Jeremiah 4:8.
In Isaiah 9:17, the refrain 'his anger is not turned away' is repeated after judgment on wickedness, identical to Jeremiah 4:8.
In Isaiah 5:25, the same refrain 'his anger is not turned away' appears, describing God's sustained wrath against Israel, directly echoing Jeremiah 4:8.
Joel 1:13 explicitly says 'gird yourselves with sackcloth and lament... wail', mirroring the exact actions commanded here.
In Ezekiel 30:2, a wail is proclaimed for the day of the LORD against Egypt, paralleling Jeremiah's lament over Israel's judgment.
James 5:1 echoes this call to weep and howl over impending judgment, targeting the rich who face similar ruin.