Amos 8:7
The Lord hath sworn by the excellency of Jacob, Surely I will never forget any of their works.
Cross-reference
Amos 6:8 also mentions God swearing by himself and abhorring the pride of Jacob — the same divine oath against Israel's arrogance.
Jeremiah 17:1 says sin is engraved permanently—parallel to Amos where God will never forget their deeds.
Hosea 9:9 repeats the exact phrase 'remember their iniquity' and 'punish their sins', directly echoing Amos's theme of judgment.
In Hosea 8:13, God likewise remembers iniquity to punish, reinforcing the certainty of divine retribution for Israel's deeds.
Hosea 7:2 says God remembers all their evil—directly parallel to Amos' declaration that God will never forget their deeds.
Jeremiah 31:34 promises God will remember sin no more—the opposite of Amos' vow never to forget.
Isaiah 43:25 says God will not remember sins for His people—opposite to Amos' vow to never forget deeds in judgment.
Psalm 10:11 says the wicked think God forgets—direct contrast to Amos where God swears He will never forget their deeds.
Psalm 109:15 prays for God to cut off memory of enemies, opposite of Amos's 'never forget' — a contrast of imprecation vs. judgment.
Jeremiah 44:21 states that the LORD remembered the people's sins, directly matching Amos's declaration that He will never forget.
Genesis 8:1 contrasts God remembering Noah for deliverance rather than judgment, showing two sides of divine remembrance.
Jeremiah 22:5 has God swearing by Himself ('I swear by myself') to desolate the house—same oath formula as Amos 8:7's 'pride of Jacob'.
Psalm 47:4 calls Israel 'the pride of Jacob' as God's chosen heritage — a positive usage contrasting with Amos 8:7's oath of judgment.
Deuteronomy 33:26-29 celebrates Israel as the 'pride of Jacob' in blessing — a stark contrast to Amos 8:7 where the same phrase appears in a judgment oath.
Isaiah 14:24 records God swearing an oath that His purpose stands, similar in form to Amos's oath of judgment.
Psalm 89:35 has God swearing by His holiness, analogous to swearing by the pride of Jacob, but for covenant promises.
Psalm 50:21 describes God rebuking after silence, similar to Amos's oath to never forget sins until judgment comes.
Jeremiah 44:21 asks if God did not remember their offerings—same divine remembrance of sin for judgment as in Amos 8:7's 'never forget their deeds'.
Jeremiah 44:26 swears by God's great name to end invocation—parallel oath formula to Amos 8:7's pride of Jacob.
Ezekiel 5:11 uses 'as I live' oath to pronounce judgment—similar solemn divine oath as Amos 8:7.
Job 34:25 says God knows their works and crushes them, aligning with Amos's certainty that deeds will not be forgotten.
Ezekiel 44:12 depicts God lifting His hand in oath—gesture of swearing judgment, parallel to Amos 8:7's verbal oath.