Ezekiel 21:24
Therefore thus saith the Lord God; Because ye have made your iniquity to be remembered, in that your transgressions are discovered, so that in all your doings your sins do appear; because, I say, that ye are come to remembrance, ye shall be taken with the hand.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 21:23 says God brings guilt to remembrance—identical concept to verse 24's 'made guilt remembered'—within the same oracle of judgment.
In Ezekiel 16:16-22, the specific idolatries and child sacrifices are listed—the very transgressions uncovered in 21:24.
In Ezekiel 22:3-12, the catalog of bloodshed, oppression, and idolatry details the sins that 21:24 says are now uncovered.
In Ezekiel 22:24-31, the corruption of leaders and people exposes the very guilt that 21:24 says is remembered.
In Ezekiel 23:5-21, the sexual unfaithfulness of Oholah and Oholibah illustrates the transgressions uncovered in 21:24.
Ezekiel 16:57 uses the same Hebrew root 'uncovered' for wickedness—mirroring Ezekiel 21:24's 'transgressions uncovered'—both exposing sin before judgment.
In Ezekiel 24:7, the bloodshed left uncovered matches the transgressions that 21:24 says are now exposed.
In Ezekiel 23:18, God exposes Oholibah's nakedness and turns from her—similar to the exposure of guilt and resulting judgment in Ezekiel 21:24.
In 1 Kings 17:18, the widow says Elijah came to 'bring my sin to remembrance'—the exact phrase used for guilt in Ezekiel 21:24, though in a personal context.
In Isaiah 3:9, sinners flaunt their guilt openly—just as 21:24 says transgressions are uncovered and brought to remembrance.
In Jeremiah 2:34, the blood of the innocent poor is found on skirts—a specific sin that 21:24 says is now uncovered.
Jeremiah 6:15 adds they felt no shame for abominations — linking shameless sin to the exposure and judgment described here.
Jeremiah 8:12 repeats the same lack of shame — reinforcing that unashamed sin leads to exposure and punishment as here.