Ezekiel 2:7
And thou shalt speak my words unto them, whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear: for they are most rebellious.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 2:5 is the immediate parallel, stating the same 'whether they listen or fail to listen' condition.
Ezekiel 3:17 defines Ezekiel's role as a watchman who must warn Israel — adding responsibility to the speaking command.
Ezekiel 3:10 expands the commission: Ezekiel must first receive God's words in his heart before speaking them.
Ezekiel 33:7 amplifies the role to a watchman—warning the people—building on the commission here.
Ezekiel 11:25 records the prophet's obedience—speaking all the Lord showed him—fulfilling the commission.
Ezekiel 3:11 restates the command to speak whether they hear or refuse, tying it specifically to the exiles.
Ezekiel 3:4 repeats the same commission—'speak my words to them'—reinforcing the prophetic mandate.
In Ezekiel 11:5, the Spirit commands Ezekiel to speak a specific oracle, applying the general commission here.
Jeremiah 1:7 parallels Ezekiel's commission: both prophets are told to speak God's words despite inadequacy or audience rejection.
Jeremiah 1:17 echoes the same prophetic call: arise and speak all God commands, without fear of the people.
Jeremiah 26:2 gives the same charge: 'Tell them everything I command you; do not omit a word.'
2 Chronicles 18:13 has Micaiah vowing to speak only what God says, mirroring Ezekiel's commission.
Jeremiah 42:21 shows the people refusing to obey the prophet's message, mirroring the rebellious response Ezekiel is told to expect.
Jeremiah 23:22 contrasts false prophets with true ones who proclaim God's words—parallel to Ezekiel's command.
Jeremiah 15:19 reaffirms the prophet as God's mouth, directly parallel to Ezekiel's call to speak God's words.
Jeremiah 1:8 promises divine presence during prophetic commission, complementing Ezekiel's charge to speak despite rejection.
Jeremiah 15:10 laments the strife and opposition from the people—the very context Ezekiel faces as a rebellious audience.
Exodus 6:29 instructs Moses to tell Pharaoh everything God says, similar charge to speak fully.
Jonah 1:2 sends a prophet to a wicked city — a parallel to Ezekiel's commission to rebellious Israel.
Jonah 3:2 echoes the command to proclaim the message God gives, though to a foreign city.
Matthew 28:20 extends the commission to teach all Christ commanded, mirroring the prophet's duty to speak God's words.