Hosea 13:6
According to their pasture, so were they filled; they were filled, and their heart was exalted; therefore have they forgotten me.
Cross-reference
Hosea 10:1 describes Israel's increased fruit leading to more altars — the same pattern of prosperity causing forgetfulness of God.
Hosea 8:4 shows the same pattern: Israel made kings and idols without God, reflecting their pride and forgetfulness after being fed.
Hosea 8:14 repeats the charge of forgetting the Maker, leading to judgment by fire — same root sin as the forgetfulness in 13:6.
Hosea 4:7 shows the same pattern: increased blessings led to increased sin, mirroring the pride-from-prosperity in 13:6.
Hosea 4:6 also ties forgetting God to destruction — here the cause is rejecting knowledge, while 13:6 links it to prosperity's pride.
Deuteronomy 8:12-14 warns against being full, heart lifted up, and forgetting God — a nearly identical sequence to Hosea 13:6.
Jeremiah 2:31 echoes the same complaint: God provided for Israel, yet they rejected Him, saying 'we will come to you no more.'
Isaiah 17:10 explicitly says Israel forgot God their Savior — matching Hosea's theme of forgetting after being fed and satisfied.
Nehemiah 9:26 records the same sequence: fullness followed by disobedience — echoing Hosea's warning about a lifted heart and forgotten God.
Nehemiah 9:26 immediately shows rebellion and casting aside God's law after fullness — directly parallels the forgetfulness in Hosea 13:6.
Nehemiah 9:25 describes Israel eating, being filled, and delighting in God's goodness — the same prosperity that led to forgetting God in Hosea 13:6.
Deuteronomy 32:18 accuses Israel of forgetting the God who fathered them — the same forgetfulness after provision Hosea highlights.
Deuteronomy 32:13-15 tells how Jeshurun grew fat and forsook God — a close parallel to Israel's fullness and forgetfulness in Hosea.
Deuteronomy 6:10-12 directly warns against forgetting God when satisfied in the promised land — the exact pattern Hosea describes.
Proverbs 30:9 warns against being full and denying God—mirrors the danger of satisfaction leading to pride.
Jeremiah 3:21 directly mentions Israel forgetting the Lord—identical charge to 'they forgot me' here.
Jeremiah 5:7 uses 'When I fed them to the full'—explicitly links feeding to unfaithfulness, as in Hosea.
Ezekiel 23:35 accuses Israel of forgetting God and casting Him behind—reinforces the charge of forgetfulness.
Deuteronomy 32:18 accuses Israel of forgetting the God who fathered them — the same forgetfulness after provision Hosea highlights.
Deuteronomy 31:20 predicts that when Israel eats and is satisfied, they will turn to other gods — a direct parallel to Hosea's account.
1 Timothy 6:17 directly warns the rich against haughtiness and trusting wealth — the very pride and false security that led Israel to forget God in 13:6.
Ezekiel 28:5 connects increased wealth to pride of heart—same causal link between blessing and arrogance.