Jeremiah 14:10
Thus saith the Lord unto this people, Thus have they loved to wander, they have not refrained their feet, therefore the Lord doth not accept them; he will now remember their iniquity, and visit their sins.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 2:23-25 describes Israel's love of wandering after idols – the exact phrase 'loved to wander' repeated.
Jeremiah 2:25 shows the people refusing to restrain feet, saying 'I have loved foreigners' — directly parallel to 'loved to wander'.
Jeremiah 2:36 accuses Israel of constantly changing their ways, mirroring the restless wandering condemned in 14:10.
In Jeremiah 3:2, Israel's idolatry is described as wandering after lovers — the same 'loved to wander' image of spiritual adultery.
Jeremiah 6:20 states God does not accept their offerings — parallel to the Lord not accepting them in Jeremiah 14:10.
Jeremiah 8:5 speaks of perpetual backsliding and refusal to return — mirroring the 'loved to wander' and not restraining feet.
Jeremiah 31:34 promises forgiveness and forgetting sin — contrasting the remembrance and punishment in Jeremiah 14:10.
Jeremiah 44:21 reinforces that God remembered their incense offerings as sin — same theme of divine remembrance leading to judgment.
Jeremiah 44:22 expands on God's inability to bear their evil deeds, resulting in desolation — matching the punishment in Jeremiah 14:10.
Hebrews 8:12 promises God will remember their sins no more — a direct contrast to the judgment in Jeremiah 14:10.
Psalm 119:101 describes holding back feet from evil to keep God's word — opposite of the unrestrained wandering in Jeremiah 14:10.
Malachi 1:8-13 describes God refusing blemished sacrifices — parallel to the Lord not accepting the people in Jeremiah 14:10.
Amos 5:22 says God will not accept their burnt offerings — echoing the rejection of the people in Jeremiah 14:10.
In Hosea 11:9, God relents from anger and will not destroy — contrasting the punishment declared in Jeremiah 14:10.
Hosea 11:7 says the people are bent on turning away and God will not raise them — parallel to their wandering and God's rejection.
Hosea 9:9 also repeats 'he will remember their iniquity; he will punish their sins' — same prophetic formula.
Hosea 8:13 uses the exact same phrase: 'he will remember their iniquity and punish their sins' — a direct parallel and likely source.
Hosea 7:2 says 'I remember all their evil' — directly parallels God remembering iniquity in this verse.
Proverbs 1:15 warns to 'hold back your foot' from evil — opposite of 'they did not restrain their feet' here.