Ezekiel 15:6

Therefore thus saith the Lord God; As the vine tree among the trees of the forest, which I have given to the fire for fuel, so will I give the inhabitants of Jerusalem.

Cross-reference

Ezekiel 15:2 poses the rhetorical question about the vine's worthlessness, which verse 6 answers by applying it to Jerusalem's fate.

Ezekiel 17:3-10 gives another vine allegory where the vine is judged, reinforcing the same message of Jerusalem's destruction.

Ezekiel 20:47 uses fire devouring every tree as judgment, mirroring the vine given to fire and amplifying the theme of unquenchable divine wrath.

Ezekiel 20:48 declares this fire is from the Lord and unquenchable, directly paralleling the irreversible judgment in verse 6.

Ezekiel 19:12 describes the vine's rods consumed by fire—directly paralleling the vine wood given to fuel.

Ezekiel 22:21 uses fire of God's wrath melting people, echoing the fire judgment on Jerusalem's inhabitants.

Ezekiel 12:20 declares similar judgment on Jerusalem's land, reinforcing the theme of divine punishment.

Isaiah 5:1-5 uses a vineyard allegory to announce God's judgment on Israel for unfruitfulness, just as the vine wood is given to fire.

Jeremiah 7:20 declares God's wrath will burn unquenchably on the land, its trees and fruit — a parallel fire judgment against Jerusalem.

Jeremiah 24:8-10 uses the metaphor of bad figs — like Ezekiel's worthless vine wood — to describe Judah's destined destruction.

Psalm 80:8 Contrast

Psalm 80:8 recalls Israel as a vine God planted—contrasting with Ezekiel's vine given to fire as judgment.

Isaiah 5:24 Parallel

Isaiah 5:24 also uses fire imagery for judgment, comparing the people's rejection to stubble consumed by flame.