Ezekiel 15:4
Behold, it is cast into the fire for fuel; the fire devoureth both the ends of it, and the midst of it is burned. Is it meet for any work?
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 19:12 repeats the vine allegory with fire consuming it, intensifying the prophecy of Jerusalem's destruction.
Psalm 80:16 describes Israel as a vine burned with fire — the same image of God's judgment consuming his people.
Isaiah 27:11 shows dry boughs gathered for fire — same picture of useless branches burned as divine judgment.
John 15:6 takes up this very image — branches not abiding in Christ are cast into the fire and burned, just like the vine wood.
Hebrews 6:8 describes land that bears thorns as worthless and ends in burning — parallel to the vine wood good only for fire.
Jeremiah 11:16 uses the same olive tree burned by God as judgment, directly echoing the vine-burning metaphor for Israel.
Amos 4:11 mentions a brand plucked from the burning — contrasting rescue from fire with the vine wood cast into it here.
Job 15:30 also uses fire to consume worthless shoots, reinforcing the theme of divine judgment consuming the wicked.
Isaiah 1:31 depicts the strong becoming tinder and burning together — another image of judgment as consuming fire, though not vine-specific.