Jeremiah 5:23
But this people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart; they are revolted and gone.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 5:5, the leaders broke the yoke; this extends the same rebellion to the whole people.
In Jeremiah 6:28, they are called hardened rebels — identical description of stubbornness.
In Jeremiah 17:9, the heart is deceitful and incurable — the same diagnosis of the rebellious heart.
Jeremiah 4:17 blames rebellion for the coming siege, reinforcing the same cause—Israel's stubborn heart—that Jeremiah 5:23 identifies.
Jeremiah 13:10 directly repeats 'stubbornly follow their own heart', linking to the same rebellious heart condition described here.
In Psalm 95:10, God says their hearts go astray — directly parallel to Israel's stubborn turning away here.
In Isaiah 1:5, the prophet asks why they persist in rebellion with an afflicted heart — same condition.
In Hosea 11:7, the people are determined to turn away — exactly the same stubborn turning away.
In Hebrews 3:10, the wilderness generation had hearts always going astray — mirroring this stubborn rebellion.
Isaiah 59:13 describes turning away from God and speaking rebellion, matching the 'turned aside and gone away' in Jeremiah.
Isaiah 65:2 depicts a rebellious people following their own devices, the same attitude of stubborn rebellion Jeremiah condemns.
Ezekiel 12:2 calls Israel a 'rebellious house', directly mirroring the stubborn rebellion Jeremiah diagnoses in the people.
In Isaiah 31:6, God calls them to return from revolt — contrasting their turning away here.