Passage
And I will not have mercy upon her children; for they are the children of whoredoms.
And I will not have mercy upon her children; for they are the children of whoredoms.
Hosea 2:2 Plead with your mother, plead; for she is not my wife, neither am I her husband: and let her put away her whoredoms from her face, and her adulteries from between her breasts;
Hosea 2:3 lest I strip her naked, and set her as in the day that she was born, and make her as a wilderness, and set her as a dry land, and slay her with thirst.
Hosea 2:4 And I will not have mercy upon her children; for they are the children of whoredoms.
Hosea 2:5 For their mother hath played the harlot; she that conceived them hath done shamefully: for she said, I will go after my lovers, that give [me] my bread and my water, my wool and my flax, mine oil and my drink.
Hosea 2:6 Therefore behold, I will hedge up thy way with thorns; and I will fence [her] in with a wall, that she shall not find her paths.
The verse centers on "mercy", "upon", "children", and "whoredoms". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "mercy" and "upon", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 3's "lest I strip her naked and set..." into verse 5's "For their mother hath played the harlot...", so "mercy" and "upon" belong inside that flow. In Hosea context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "mercy" and "upon" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.