Jeremiah 8:21

For the hurt of the daughter of my people am I hurt; I am black; astonishment hath taken hold on me.

Cross-reference

Jeremiah 4:19 expresses visceral pain—'my bowels, I am pained'—identical to the prophet's anguish over his people's hurt here.

Jeremiah 9:1 longs for tears to weep for the slain—the same heartbreak over the daughter of his people that drives his hurt.

Jeremiah 14:17 commands tears day and night for the virgin daughter broken with a grievous blow—directly parallel to the hurt.

In Jeremiah 6:26, the same 'daughter of my people' is called to bitter mourning — Jeremiah now embodies that grief himself.

In Jeremiah 10:19, the same lament over a grievous wound echoes the prophet's personal anguish for his people's hurt.

In Jeremiah 14:2, the image of 'black' mourning parallels the prophet's astonishment in the face of national devastation.

In Psalm 137:3-6, exiles weep and refuse to forget Jerusalem — the same deep grief for the destroyed city that Jeremiah personally feels here.

Luke 19:41 Parallel

In Luke 19:41, Jesus weeps over Jerusalem's coming destruction — the same prophetic grief over the city that Jeremiah shows here.

In Romans 9:1-3, Paul expresses great sorrow and unceasing anguish for his fellow Israelites — mirroring Jeremiah's personal hurt for his people.

Isaiah 1:6 Parallel

In Isaiah 1:6, the nation is covered in unhealed wounds — the same 'hurt of the daughter of my people' that Jeremiah personally feels.