Ezekiel 21:22
At his right hand was the divination for Jerusalem, to appoint captains, to open the mouth in the slaughter, to lift up the voice with shouting, to appoint battering rams against the gates, to cast a mount, and to build a fort.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 21:15, the same sword is described as causing hearts to melt — here the lot determines its target.
Ezekiel 4:2 lists the same siege works (battering rams, siege wall, mound) that appear here, showing the earlier enacted symbolism.
Ezekiel 26:8 uses identical siege imagery (mounds, battering rams) against Tyre — showing the same tactics apply to Jerusalem.
Joshua 6:20 describes the great shout that brought down Jericho’s walls, directly paralleling the siege shout mentioned here.
Jeremiah 52:4 records the actual siege of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar, fulfilling this prophecy of battering rams and siegeworks.
2 Kings 19:32 records God's promise that no siege mound would be built against Jerusalem by Assyria—contrasting with the Babylonians here.
2 Kings 25:1 describes the same historic siege with siegeworks, confirming the prophetic details here.
Isaiah 29:3 uses identical imagery of encampment, towers, and siegeworks against Jerusalem, a parallel prophecy of siege.
Isaiah 37:33, like 2 Kings 19:32, promises no siege mound from Assyria—a direct contrast to the Babylonian siege here.
Micah 5:1 also describes a siege against Jerusalem — both refer to the same historic event of Babylon's attack.
Jeremiah 50:15 urges shouting against Babylon in its fall, using similar siege language but applied to Babylon instead of Jerusalem.