Jeremiah 6:14
They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 6:26 calls for bitter mourning as the destroyer comes — the direct consequence of the false peace proclaimed in v14.
In Jeremiah 4:10, the prophet laments that God's own message of peace deceived the people, mirroring the false healing here.
Jeremiah 5:12 shows the people denying disaster will come, a direct source of the false peace proclaimed by the prophets.
Jeremiah 8:11 repeats this exact indictment — the false prophets offer superficial healing and false peace.
Jeremiah 8:12 continues the judgment: those who offered false peace will fall when punishment comes — the consequence of the superficial healing.
In Jeremiah 14:13, the prophets promise 'assured peace' despite coming judgment—identical to the superficial healing here.
Jeremiah 23:17 has false prophets telling the wicked 'no disaster shall come,' the same empty assurance as here.
Jeremiah 28:3 records Hananiah's specific false prophecy of quick restoration, another example of the 'peace' proclaimed here.
Jeremiah 37:19 taunts prophets who promised no Babylonian attack — exactly the false peace declared in Jeremiah 6:14.
Jeremiah 28:9 establishes fulfillment as the test for a peace prophet — exposing the false peace of Jeremiah 6:14.
Jeremiah 4:9 prophesies that prophets will be appalled at judgment — the stark reversal of their confident 'peace' in Jeremiah 6:14.
Jeremiah 7:4 warns against deceptive words of false security in the temple — parallel to the false peace in Jeremiah 6:14.
Jeremiah 14:17 laments the actual grievous wound of the people — in contrast to the false 'healing' claimed in 6:14.
Ezekiel 13:22 describes prophets who encourage the wicked not to repent, the same false peace that avoids real healing.
2 Peter 2:19 describes false teachers promising freedom while enslaved — mirroring the false peace declared in Jeremiah 6:14.
Micah 2:11 depicts a prophet who preaches what people want to hear (wine), a parallel to the 'peace' message here.
2 Peter 2:1 warns of false teachers bringing destructive heresies, a NT continuation of the false prophecy pattern seen here.
2 Peter 2:18 describes false teachers enticing with empty boasts and fleshly desires, the same deceptive allure as the false peace.
Ezekiel 13:10 condemns prophets who say 'Peace' when there is no peace — identical falsehood to Jeremiah 6:14's superficial healing.
Lamentations 2:14 explicitly accuses prophets of false visions that did not expose sin, matching the failure to heal truly here.
Ezekiel 13:16 repeats the same indictment: prophets who cry 'Peace' when there is none, echoing the false healing in Jeremiah.
Zechariah 10:2 describes diviners giving empty consolation, exactly like Jeremiah's 'Peace, peace' with no peace.
Isaiah 30:10 shows people demanding smooth prophecies and illusions — the same false comfort condemned in Jeremiah 6:14.
Proverbs 24:24 curses those who acquit the wicked — parallel to declaring 'peace' where there is no peace in Jeremiah 6:14.
In Job 13:4, Job calls his friends 'worthless physicians' who whitewash lies — parallel to the false healing of the wound in Jeremiah 6:14.
Isaiah 56:10 depicts watchmen who fail to warn — similar to the false prophets in Jeremiah 6:14 who cry peace despite danger.