Ezekiel 16:43
Because thou hast not remembered the days of thy youth, but hast fretted me in all these things; behold, therefore I also will recompense thy way upon thine head, saith the Lord God: and thou shalt not commit this lewdness above all thine abominations.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 16:22 also mentions forgetting the days of youth, directly parallel to the same phrase in Ezekiel 16:43.
Ezekiel 22:31 uses 'returned their way upon their heads' — a variant of the same judgment phrase.
Ezekiel 11:21 repeats 'bring their deeds upon their heads' — identical phrasing emphasizing retribution.
Ezekiel 9:10 repeats 'bring their deeds upon their heads' exactly — a direct echo of the same judgment formula.
Ezekiel 7:9 again states punishment according to ways, a consistent theme throughout Ezekiel's oracles.
Ezekiel 7:4 repeats the unsparing punishment for abominations, reinforcing the same judgment principle.
Ezekiel 7:3 declares judgment according to ways, directly matching the 'brought your conduct upon your head' here.
Ezekiel 6:9 says the remnant will remember, contrasting the lack of remembrance in Ezekiel 16:43.
Ezekiel 24:14 reinforces God's unrelenting judgment according to deeds, echoing 16:43's declaration of recompense.
Ezekiel 7:9 uses the same 'no pity' and punishment according to ways — reinforcing the theme of divine retribution without mercy.
Jeremiah 2:32 asks if a virgin forgets her attire, yet God's people forget Him — same theme of forgetfulness.
Isaiah 63:10 says rebellion grieves the Holy Spirit and makes God an enemy, directly paralleling the enraging here.
Psalm 106:13 describes soon forgetting God's works, paralleling the failure to remember in Ezekiel 16:43.
Acts 7:51 accuses the Jewish leaders of resisting the Holy Spirit like their ancestors, mirroring the persistent rebellion in Ezekiel.
Psalm 78:42 laments not remembering God's power, similar to the forgetfulness in Ezekiel 16:43.
Isaiah 54:4 promises God will erase the shame of youth — in contrast to Ezekiel's condemnation for forgetting youth.
Malachi 2:17 records people questioning God's justice by calling evil good—contrasting with 16:43's certainty of judgment.
Deuteronomy 32:21 records God's anger provoked by idolatry, the same principle underlying the judgment here.
Ephesians 4:30 warns against grieving the Holy Spirit, the same offense that provoked God's anger in Ezekiel.
Isaiah 43:24 says Israel wearied God with sins — similar complaint of provoking God leading to judgment.
Psalm 95:10 describes God loathing the wilderness generation for their wayward hearts, similar to the enraging in Ezekiel.
Psalm 78:40 recalls Israel's rebellion grieving God in the wilderness, a pattern of provocation echoed in this judgment.