Jeremiah 8:11
For they have healed the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace, peace; when there is no peace.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 28:3-9 gives a concrete example: Hananiah prophesies peace (yoke broken) against Jeremiah's true word — identical false assurance.
Jeremiah 6:14 contains the exact same phrase about dressing wounds lightly and saying 'Peace, peace' when there is none.
Jeremiah 14:14 describes false prophets prophesying lies in God's name, matching the false peace proclamation in 8:11.
Jeremiah 14:15 reinforces the same false prophets promising 'no sword/famine' and God's judgment — the lying 'peace' message.
Jeremiah 27:9 warns against prophets saying 'You shall not serve Babylon' — another false peace promise like the one in 8:11.
Jeremiah 27:10 declares these lies lead to exile — the consequence of heeding the false 'peace' in 8:11.
Jeremiah 2:8 accuses priests and prophets of not knowing God — the same corrupt leadership behind the false peace in 8:11.
Jeremiah 4:10 laments that God allowed deception of peace — directly echoing the false peace proclaimed in 8:11.
Jeremiah 14:13 has prophets promising lasting peace despite sword and famine — another instance of the same false assurance.
Jeremiah 23:17 directly quotes false prophets saying 'You will have peace' — identical to the false peace in 8:11.
Jeremiah 28:9 gives the test for true peace prophecy — contrasting with the false prophets of 8:11 who proclaim peace without authority.
1 Kings 22:13 shows a messenger urging Micaiah to speak favorably like the others — the pressure to give false peace echoes 8:11.
Ezekiel 13:10-16 explicitly repeats 'Peace, peace, when there is no peace' — the exact same indictment of false prophets.
Lamentations 2:14 directly accuses prophets of false oracles that didn't expose sin — the same 'healing lightly' as in 8:11.
1 Kings 22:6 records 400 prophets assuring Ahab victory — a classic case of 'peace, peace' when there is no peace, as 8:11 condemns.
Isaiah 30:10 describes people demanding pleasant prophecies — exactly the false comfort Jeremiah condemns in 8:11.
Proverbs 24:24 condemns those who say the guilty are innocent — the same evil of calling evil good, parallel to the false peace here.
In 2 Chronicles 18:5, false prophets assure Ahab of victory, mirroring the false peace proclaimed in Jeremiah 8:11.
Ezekiel 13:16 repeats the exact indictment—prophets crying 'peace' when none—directly paralleling this false prophecy.
Ezekiel 22:28 describes prophets whitewashing with false visions, mirroring the 'healing lightly' and false peace here.
Zechariah 10:2 condemns diviners giving empty consolation, directly echoing the false peace here and its deceptive comfort.
Ezekiel 13:22 describes strengthening the wicked with false hope — akin to 'healing lightly' in 8:11 by reassuring the guilty.
Micah 2:11 depicts people wanting a prophet who preaches pleasant lies — the same craving for false 'peace' opposed in 8:11.
Romans 16:18 describes smooth talk deceiving the naive—similar to the 'peace, peace' of false prophets here, applied to NT teachers.