Ezekiel 13:13
Therefore thus saith the Lord God; I will even rend it with a stormy wind in my fury; and there shall be an overflowing shower in mine anger, and great hailstones in my fury to consume it.
Cross-reference
Exodus 9:18-29 recounts the plague of hail as divine judgment on Egypt — hailstones here serve the same purpose.
Psalm 105:32 recalls the plague of hail on Egypt — direct parallel to the judgment hailstones here.
Jeremiah 23:19 describes God's storm of wrath against false prophets — the exact same judgment context and imagery.
Revelation 8:7 describes hail and fire in apocalyptic judgment — strong eschatological parallel to this judgment.
Revelation 16:21 features great hailstones as a plague from God, mirroring the hailstones in Ezekiel's judgment oracle.
Psalm 11:6 depicts God raining coals and sulfur on the wicked, a judgment storm similar to Ezekiel's hailstones.
Psalm 18:12 portrays hailstones as part of God's theophany in deliverance — here they are agents of wrath.
Psalm 18:13 repeats hailstones and fire in God's thunder — same imagery but in a deliverance context.
Psalm 107:25 also uses 'stormy wind' as God's command, but for rescue rather than judgment — same imagery, different purpose.
Psalm 148:8 lists 'stormy wind' and hail among creation obeying God — here they are instruments of wrath, there of praise.
Haggai 2:17 includes hail among curses for disobedience — same instrument of divine discipline.
In Job 9:17, Job describes God crushing him with a tempest, a similar storm of divine affliction but in a personal lament.