Ezekiel 13:14
So will I break down the wall that ye have daubed with untempered morter, and bring it down to the ground, so that the foundation thereof shall be discovered, and it shall fall, and ye shall be consumed in the midst thereof: and ye shall know that I am the Lord.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 13:9, God's hand is against false prophets — the same chapter, this verse sets up the judgment that the wall imagery illustrates.
In Ezekiel 13:21, judgment on false prophetesses tearing veils — both are part of the same oracle against deceptive prophets.
In Ezekiel 13:23, the same judgment concludes: false visions cease. Both passages are part of God's case against lying prophets.
Ezekiel 6:7 also ends with 'you will know that I am the Lord' after judgment on idolatry, reinforcing the same recognition theme.
Ezekiel 11:10 repeats the recognition formula after judging Jerusalem's leaders, paralleling the pattern in 13:14.
Ezekiel 14:8 uses the same 'then you will know I am the Lord' formula after judging idolaters, echoing the pattern of divine recognition.
Ezekiel 17:21 uses the same 'you will know that I am the Lord' formula after judging Zedekiah's rebellion, following the pattern.
In Jeremiah 14:15, false prophets who prophesy peace will perish — directly parallels the whitewashed wall of false assurance here.
In Jeremiah 23:15, God will punish false prophets with poisoned water — both show divine judgment on those who lead my people astray.
Micah 1:6 says God will uncover Samaria’s foundations, closely paralleling Ezekiel's wall being broken down to its foundation.
In Matthew 7:26, Jesus echoes the collapse of a poorly founded building — both warn against building on falsehood or disobedience.
In Matthew 7:27, the house falls with a great crash — directly parallel to the wall's destruction here, both illustrate judgment on folly.
In Luke 6:49, the house without foundation collapses completely — same metaphor as the wall's fall, emphasizing total ruin.
In 1 Corinthians 3:11-15, Paul uses a building tested by fire — both expose worthless work, though Paul's context is eternal reward.