Hosea 8:1
Set the trumpet to thy mouth. He shall come as an eagle against the house of the Lord, because they have transgressed my covenant, and trespassed against my law.
Cross-references
Hosea 5:8 also commands blowing a trumpet and sounding an alarm, using the same imagery for divine warning.
Hosea 6:7 also says Israel 'transgressed the covenant' — the exact same indictment found here.
Hosea 9:15 continues the same judgment theme: driving them from God’s house, tying directly back to the eagle.
Hosea 10:10 echoes the same theme: God will gather nations against Israel to discipline them for their sins.
Jeremiah 31:32 recalls the covenant Israel broke — the very transgression Hosea announces here.
Ezekiel 33:3-6 expands on the watchman's duty to blow the trumpet to warn, directly linking to Hosea's alarm call.
Ezekiel 16:59 accuses Jerusalem of breaking the covenant — matching Hosea's charge against Israel.
Jeremiah 51:27 commands blowing the trumpet to muster nations against Babylon, a parallel call to alarm for judgment.
Jeremiah 48:40 applies the same 'eagle flying swiftly' image against Moab, showing a common prophetic motif.
Joel 2:1 commands blowing the trumpet in Zion as an alarm for the day of the LORD, echoing Hosea's urgent warning.
Amos 3:6 connects the trumpet blast with fear and divine disaster, reinforcing Hosea's theme of alarm and judgment.
Amos 8:3 depicts temple songs turning to wailings and dead bodies — matching the judgment on the house of the Lord.
Jeremiah 6:1 calls to blow the trumpet in Tekoa as a warning of destruction from the north, similar to Hosea's alarm.
Jeremiah 4:13 echoes the same eagle simile for an enemy’s speed — reinforcing the theme of sudden judgment.
Jeremiah 4:5 commands blowing the trumpet as a warning of coming disaster, matching Hosea's urgent alarm.
Habakkuk 1:8 similarly describes invaders flying like an eagle to devour — a clear parallel in judgment language.
Hebrews 8:8-13 cites the broken covenant, contrasting it with the new covenant — echoing Hosea's condemnation.
Isaiah 24:5 describes breaking the everlasting covenant — the same charge of covenant violation bringing judgment.
Deuteronomy 28:49 also uses the eagle as a symbol of a swift, foreign invader — the same threat imagery.
Psalm 78:37 states Israel was not faithful to God's covenant, directly echoing the covenant breaking in Hosea 8:1.
Ezekiel 17:3 uses an eagle as a symbol for a foreign king invading, echoing the same warning imagery in Hosea 8:1.
Jeremiah 49:22 uses the same eagle imagery for judgment against Edom, mirroring the eagle invader in Hosea 8:1.
Jeremiah 34:18 mentions those who transgressed God's covenant, similar to the covenant breaking in Hosea 8:1, with the added calf ritual.
Jeremiah 11:10 explicitly says Israel and Judah broke God's covenant, the same accusation in Hosea 8:1.
Jeremiah 6:17 describes watchmen blowing the trumpet as a warning that was ignored, paralleling the trumpet alarm in Hosea 8:1.
Jeremiah 2:2 recalls Israel's early devotion as a bride, contrasting with the covenant breaking in Hosea 8:1.
Zephaniah 1:16 describes the day of the LORD with a trumpet blast, aligning with Hosea's trumpet call of impending judgment.
Isaiah 58:1 uses the trumpet metaphor for proclaiming transgression, paralleling Hosea's alarm over covenant breaking.
Ezekiel 7:14 mentions the trumpet has been blown but no one goes to battle, reflecting the futility of warning amid God's wrath.
In Amos 9:1, the Lord strikes the temple altar — the same judgment on the sanctuary that Hosea's trumpet warns of.
In Zechariah 9:14, the trumpet also sounds as the Lord's signal, but for deliverance rather than alarm.