Jeremiah 7:14
Therefore will I do unto this house, which is called by my name, wherein ye trust, and unto the place which I gave to you and to your fathers, as I have done to Shiloh.
Cross-reference
In Jeremiah 7:4, the people are warned not to trust deceptive 'temple of the Lord' claims; here God decrees the temple's destruction like Shiloh.
In Jeremiah 7:10, the people stand in the temple and claim deliverance while sinning; here God declares judgment on that very house.
Jeremiah 52:13-23 records the Babylonian burning of the temple and removal of its vessels, fulfilling this prophecy of judgment.
In Jeremiah 26:6-9, the same 'like Shiloh' prophecy is repeated, and the people's hostile reaction is recorded.
Jeremiah 22:5 reinforces the same conditional threat: disobedience will make the house a desolation, mirroring the judgment promised here.
Jeremiah 12:7 echoes this same action — God forsaking His house — reinforcing the divine abandonment promised here.
Micah 3:12 prophesies the temple hill becoming a wooded mound — another prophetic warning of Jerusalem's destruction, matching Jeremiah 7:14.
1 Samuel 4:10 describes the Philistine defeat of Israel at Shiloh—the very event Jeremiah's warning references as a precedent.
In Micah 3:11, leaders trust the Lord's presence despite corruption, just as the people trust the temple here — both face judgment.
Ezekiel 24:21 directly prophesies God desecrating His sanctuary — a clear parallel to Jeremiah 7:14's warning about the temple's destruction.
Ezekiel 9:5-7 depicts the temple defiled with the slain — a graphic portrayal of the judgment Jeremiah 7:14 pronounces on the temple.
Ezekiel 7:20-22 speaks of robbers desecrating God's treasured place — echoing Jeremiah's warning that He would destroy the temple they trusted.
Lamentations 4:1 pictures the temple's sacred gems scattered — a vivid detail of the desecration promised in Jeremiah 7:14.
Lamentations 2:7 describes the Lord rejecting his altar and abandoning his sanctuary — the very fate Jeremiah 7:14 warned would happen to the temple.
Isaiah 64:11 laments the temple burned with fire — a fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy that God would destroy the house bearing His Name.
Psalm 78:60 records God abandoning Shiloh — the historical precedent Jeremiah 7:14 cites as warning for the temple's destruction.
Psalm 74:6-7 laments the temple's destruction with vivid imagery—a poetic reflection on the event Jeremiah foretold.
2 Chronicles 36:19 documents the burning of the temple, directly fulfilling the destruction Jeremiah predicted.
2 Chronicles 36:18 records the Babylonians carrying off the temple's vessels, fulfilling the judgment Jeremiah announced.
2 Kings 25:9 records the actual burning of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar's army, fulfilling Jeremiah's prophecy.
1 Kings 9:8 adds that the temple will become a heap of ruins, mirroring the desolation Jeremiah threatens.
1 Samuel 4:11 details the capture of the ark, the climactic loss that Jeremiah's warning uses as a pattern for the temple's fate.
2 Chronicles 7:21 recounts God's conditional warning that the temple would become a proverb—a parallel to Jeremiah's threat.
In 1 Kings 9:7, God warns Solomon that the temple will be cut off if Israel forsakes Him—a parallel threat to Jeremiah's message.