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Hosea 8:13 to Jeremiah 14:10

Text: Hosea 8:13

OT Text Referred to: Jeremiah 14:10

Subject: Yahweh remembers their wickedness

Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Reference Type: Allusion

Connection Method(s): None

Significance: Hosea 8:13 warns that God "will remember their iniquity and punish their sins" (יִזְכֹּר עֲוֹנָם וְיִפְקֹד חַטֹּאתָם, yizkor avonam veyifqod chatotam), and Jeremiah 14:10 uses nearly identical language: "He will now remember their iniquity and punish their sins" (עַתָּה יִזְכֹּר עֲוֹנָם וְיִפְקֹד חַטֹּאותָם). The verbal parallel is striking — both prophets employ the same two-verb formula (זָכַר/פָּקַד, zakhar/paqad, "remember/visit") to describe God's judicial response. In Hosea, the context is Israel's hypocritical sacrifices that God does not accept; in Jeremiah, the context is the people's love of wandering away from God. The shared formula functions as a covenant-lawsuit verdict formula, signaling that God's patience has reached its limit and judicial action will follow.


Merged from reverse-direction file

Consolidated 2026-06-09 per the later-text → earlier-text canonical-direction ruling (Full Corpus Audit, Phase 0). The content below is preserved verbatim from the deleted file "Jeremiah 14.10 to Hosea 8.13"; fold unique material into the Significance during the Phase 3 IP audit, then remove this section.

Text: Jeremiah 14:10

OT Text Referred to: Hosea 8:13

Subject: Yahweh remembers their wickedness

Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Reference Type: Allusion

Connection Method(s): None

Significance: Both texts employ the formula of Yahweh "remembering" (זָכַר, zakhar) Israel's sin as a prelude to judgment. Hosea 8:13 warns "Now He will remember their iniquity and punish their sins" (עַתָּה יִזְכֹּר עֲוֹנָם, attah yizkor avonam), while Jeremiah 14:10 echoes "He will now remember their guilt and call their sins to account." Both passages also share the theme of rejected worship — Hosea describes sacrifices that God "does not accept," while Jeremiah reports that God will not listen to their cries or accept their offerings (v. 12). Jeremiah thus applies Hosea's northern-kingdom warning to Judah's southern context, showing that the same pattern of unaccepted worship and remembered sin applies when God's people persistently wander from covenant faithfulness.