Ezekiel 2:10

And he spread it before me; and it was written within and without: and there was written therein lamentations, and mourning, and woe.

Cross-reference

Ezekiel 3:3 Parallel

Ezekiel 3:3 continues the same vision: Ezekiel eats the scroll that contained lamentations, showing the internalization of God's message of woe.

Ezekiel 19:1 commands Ezekiel to 'take up a lamentation'—exactly the type of content written on the scroll, showing the prophet's commission in action.

Ezekiel 16:23 declares 'woe, woe to you!'—a direct utterance of the woe written on the scroll, applying its message to Jerusalem's wickedness.

Revelation 8:13 announces three woes on earth — mirroring the threefold content of Ezekiel's scroll: lamentation, mourning, and woe.

Revelation 9:12 marks the first woe past with two more to come — continuing the threefold woe pattern from Ezekiel's scroll.

Revelation 11:14 declares the second woe past and the third approaching — following the sequence of woes foreshadowed in Ezekiel's scroll.

Revelation 5:1 describes a scroll written inside and out, just like Ezekiel's, both containing judgments—a clear parallel in prophetic imagery.

Isaiah 30:8–11 Related theme

In Isaiah 30:8-11, Isaiah writes a judgment message on a tablet for future testimony — similar to Ezekiel's scroll of lamentations for a rebellious people.