2 Kings 23:26
Notwithstanding the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath, wherewith his anger was kindled against Judah, because of all the provocations that Manasseh had provoked him withal.
Cross-reference
2 Kings 21:11-13 lists Manasseh's sins that provoked God's anger—the reason the Lord's anger remained in 23:26.
2 Kings 22:16 records God's decree of disaster that Josiah's reforms could not avert—the same unrelenting anger in 23:26.
2 Kings 22:17 explains God's anger will not be quenched due to idolatry—the reason for the persistent anger in 23:26.
2 Kings 24:3 confirms Judah's exile was because of Manasseh's sins—the same cause for God's anger in 23:26.
2 Kings 24:4 specifies Manasseh's innocent bloodshed which God would not pardon, explaining why His wrath remained.
2 Kings 24:3 directly states the exile came because of Manasseh's sins – the outcome of God's fierce wrath.
Jeremiah 15:1-4 directly blames Manasseh's deeds for irreversible judgment – even Moses and Samuel could not intercede.
2 Chronicles 36:16 shows cumulative rejection of prophets leading to 'no remedy' – reinforcing the irreversible wrath.
Numbers 35:33 states bloodshed pollutes the land with no atonement except by the shedder's blood – connects to Manasseh's innocent blood.
Jeremiah 15:4 explicitly states the judgment came because of Manasseh's deeds, directly tying to the wrath mentioned here.
2 Chronicles 34:24 records Huldah's prophecy of calamity, confirming that God's decree of judgment was already made.
2 Chronicles 33:9 shows Manasseh led Judah into worse evil than the nations, explaining why God's wrath was so fierce.
2 Chronicles 30:8 calls to turn from stiff-neckedness so God's fierce wrath may turn away – contrasting Josiah's era where it did not.
2 Chronicles 29:10 shows Hezekiah seeking to turn away God's fierce wrath – in contrast, Josiah's reforms could not because of Manasseh.
Exodus 20:5 provides the principle of generational consequences – God visits iniquity to later generations, explaining lingering wrath.
Ezekiel 18:19 teaches sons do not bear fathers' guilt, contrasting with corporate judgment for Manasseh's sins.
Zechariah 1:2 says the LORD was very angry with your fathers, echoing the ancestral sin that provoked His wrath.