Ezekiel 21:32
Thou shalt be for fuel to the fire; thy blood shall be in the midst of the land; thou shalt be no more remembered: for I the Lord have spoken it.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 20:47, God kindles a fire that devours trees — here 'fuel for the fire' continues the same judgment imagery.
In Ezekiel 20:48, God declares the fire He kindled will not be quenched — the same unquenchable fire of judgment here.
Ezekiel 25:10 explicitly states Ammon will not be remembered among the nations—directly echoing the 'no more remembered' here.
Ezekiel 5:17 also concludes 'I the LORD have spoken it' and lists sword, blood, famine—identical judgment formula.
Ezekiel 26:14 ends with 'for I the LORD have spoken it' and declares Tyre built no more—same formula of irreversible doom.
Ezekiel 9:10 says God will not spare but recompense their way—mirroring the relentless judgment depicted here.
Ezekiel 22:20 uses furnace fire to describe God's refining judgment—similar to the 'fuel for the fire' imagery.
Zephaniah 2:9 pronounces Ammon will become perpetual desolation like Sodom—another prophecy of Ammon's total ruin.
In Malachi 4:1, the day burns like an oven turning evildoers to stubble — here the wicked become fuel for the fire.
In Matthew 3:12, the chaff is burned with unquenchable fire — the same image of fire consuming the wicked here.
Isaiah 34:3-7 similarly describes divine judgment with blood, sword, and fire—reinforcing the complete destruction of God's enemies.
Numbers 23:19 affirms God does not lie or repent—underscoring the certainty of His spoken judgment here.
Matthew 24:35 declares Jesus' words will never pass away—reinforcing the enduring authority of God's spoken decree.