Ezekiel 13:7
Have ye not seen a vain vision, and have ye not spoken a lying divination, whereas ye say, The Lord saith it; albeit I have not spoken?
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 13:2 commands to prophesy against false prophets — this verse continues by describing their false visions and claims.
Ezekiel 13:3 declares woe to prophets who follow their own spirit — this verse confirms they speak false visions.
Ezekiel 13:6 states they see false visions and lying divinations — this verse reiterates the accusation rhetorically.
In Ezekiel 22:28, the same accusation reappears: prophets whitewash with false visions, saying 'Thus says the Lord' when He has not spoken.
Matthew 24:24 explicitly mentions false prophets performing signs to lead astray — echoing the false visions and lying divinations here.
In 2 Chronicles 18:10, Zedekiah's false prophecy with iron horns echoes the same deceit—claiming God's word without His sending.
In Nehemiah 6:12, Nehemiah recognizes a false prophecy not from God—mirroring the lying divination condemned here.
In Isaiah 30:10, the people demand smooth illusions—the same false prophecies Ezekiel condemns as not from the LORD.
In Jeremiah 14:14, God says prophets prophesy lies in His name—identical to the false visions and divinations here.
In Jeremiah 23:32, God opposes prophets who tell lying dreams and lead people astray without His sending.
In Jeremiah 28:11, Hananiah falsely claims God's word about breaking Babylon's yoke—a concrete example of the lying prophecy here.
In Isaiah 28:7, priests and prophets err in vision due to drunkenness—a source of the false prophecies denounced here.