Jeremiah 7:28
But thou shalt say unto them, This is a nation that obeyeth not the voice of the Lord their God, nor receiveth correction: truth is perished, and is cut off from their mouth.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 2:30 laments that God's discipline was in vain because they 'took no correction' — directly paralleling the refusal to accept discipline in 7:28.
Jeremiah 5:1 searches for anyone who does truth — directly echoing 'truth has perished' here.
Jeremiah 5:3 describes people who 'refused to take correction' and whose faces are harder than rock — the same hardened disobedience as here.
Jeremiah 6:30 declares them 'rejected silver' because God has rejected them — a direct consequence of the failed discipline and lost truth in 7:28.
Jeremiah 9:3-8 describes tongues bent to falsehood and truth perishing from the land — the same charge.
Jeremiah 32:33 describes turning their back and not listening to instruction — the same refusal.
Jeremiah 6:8 warns Jerusalem to accept discipline or be desolated — the warning they ignored here.
Jeremiah 6:29 uses the metaphor of refining in vain — matching the theme that discipline failed to produce truth or repentance.
Psalm 50:17 accuses them of hating discipline and casting God's words behind — exactly 'did not accept discipline'.
Isaiah 59:14 says truth has stumbled in the public squares — matching 'truth has perished' here.
In Isaiah 59:15, this same lament of lacking truth echoes the perishing of truth here — both depict a society where truth has vanished.
In Hosea 4:1, the charge of no faithfulness or knowledge of God parallels the loss of truth and discipline in this verse.
In Micah 7:2-5, the godly perishing and universal deceit parallels the truth cut off from lips here.
Zephaniah 3:2 says exactly this: 'she listens to no voice, accepts no correction' — the same indictment.
Zephaniah 3:7 says God expected them to accept correction, but they became more corrupt — confirming the refusal.
In Revelation 3:19, discipline is a sign of love, contrasting with Israel's rejection of discipline here.
In 1 Corinthians 11:32, discipline leads to salvation, contrasting with Israel's refusal to accept discipline here.
Isaiah 1:5 asks why they continue to rebel despite being struck down — matching Jeremiah's charge of refusing discipline.