Ezekiel 18:10
If he beget a son that is a robber, a shedder of blood, and that doeth the like to any one of these things,
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 18:14, the son refuses to follow his father's violent ways—a direct contrast to the shedder of blood in verse 10.
Ezekiel 18:24 describes a righteous person turning to sin—a different scenario than a violent son, but thematically parallel in showing how sin brings judgment.
Ezekiel 33:8 adds the watchman's responsibility to warn, relating to the principle of individual guilt from Ezekiel 18.
In Genesis 9:5, God requires a reckoning for every shed life, establishing the principle of bloodguilt that underlies the son's violent actions here.
Genesis 9:6 decrees capital punishment for murder—directly matching the bloodshed of the violent son in Ezekiel.
Exodus 21:12 states that striking a man dead requires the death penalty—the precise legal consequence for the son who sheds blood.
Numbers 35:31 forbids accepting ransom for a murderer, reinforcing that the son's bloodshed demands death without compensation.
In Leviticus 19:13, oppression and robbery are forbidden — the violent son in this verse commits those very acts.
Jeremiah 7:9 lists murder among covenant-breaking sins, echoing the son's violent deeds that separate him from righteousness.
In 1 John 3:12, Cain murders his brother out of evil—a prototype of the violent son who sheds blood without cause.