Ezekiel 14:17
Or if I bring a sword upon that land, and say, Sword, go through the land; so that I cut off man and beast from it:
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 14:13 describes the famine judgment in the same list — the sword is another of the four severe judgments upon a sinful land.
Ezekiel 38:21 depicts God summoning a sword against Gog—similar divine sword judgment, though against a different enemy.
Ezekiel 29:8 uses identical phrasing 'bring a sword... cut off man and beast'—a direct parallel formula to Ezekiel 14:17.
Ezekiel 25:13 applies the same formula 'cut off man and beast' and 'fall by the sword' to Edom — a specific execution of this judgment.
Ezekiel 21:9-15 elaborates on the sword of the Lord—a longer parallel to the sword judgment in Ezekiel 14:17.
Ezekiel 21:4 continues the sword prophecy, cutting off righteous and wicked—same imagery as Ezekiel 14:17.
Ezekiel 5:12 describes judgment by sword, famine, pestilence—same 'sword' judgment as in Ezekiel 14:17. Strong parallel within Ezekiel.
Ezekiel 5:17 lists sword, famine, beasts—a parallel judgment oracle to the sword threat in Ezekiel 14:17.
Ezekiel 21:3 has God drawing His sword against Israel—directly parallels the 'sword' judgment in Ezekiel 14:17.
Ezekiel 12:14 also speaks of unsheathing the sword after the scattered – a direct intra-book parallel to the sword judgment.
Ezekiel 33:2 uses the exact phrase 'bring the sword upon a land', showing a consistent formula for divine judgment in Ezekiel.
Leviticus 26:25 is the covenant curse where God brings a sword to execute vengeance — directly parallel to the sword judgment here.
Jeremiah 47:6 personifies the sword of the LORD, crying for rest — directly echoing the sword as God's instrument of judgment.
Jeremiah 47:7 personifies the sword as appointed by God for a specific mission, paralleling the sword brought upon a land.
Jeremiah 12:12 depicts the sword of the LORD devouring the entire land – a direct parallel to the sword judgment described.
Jeremiah 9:16 explicitly mentions God sending the sword after the scattered people, reinforcing the same sword judgment motif.
Isaiah 65:12 also uses the sword as God's appointed judgment for those who do not answer when called, reinforcing the theme of divine punishment by sword.
Jeremiah 21:6 uses the identical phrase 'man and beast' but for pestilence rather than sword – a shared judgment formula with different instruments.