Ezekiel 22:22
As silver is melted in the midst of the furnace, so shall ye be melted in the midst thereof; and ye shall know that I the Lord have poured out my fury upon you.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 22:31, the 'fire of my wrath' consumes them, directly fulfilling the melting metaphor of verse 22.
Ezekiel 22:15 describes the scattering that follows the refining judgment — part of the same oracle's progression.
In Ezekiel 22:16, a similar recognition formula ('you shall know that I am the LORD') appears, linking the judgment to God's self-revelation.
Ezekiel 21:31 also uses 'pour out my wrath' with fiery anger — consistent judgment language within Ezekiel against Israel.
In Ezekiel 20:33, 'wrath poured out' appears as God asserts His kingship, sharing the same judgment language.
Jeremiah 7:20 uses the same 'pour out my wrath' language — God's anger burning unquenchably against Judah.
Jeremiah 42:18 also uses 'poured out my wrath' — here applied to those fleeing to Egypt, mirroring Jerusalem's judgment.
Isaiah 42:25 also depicts God pouring out his burning anger in flames — the same divine wrath imagery, though Israel remains unrepentant.
In Revelation 16:1, angels pour out bowls of God's wrath, echoing the OT image of wrath poured out as judgment.
In Hosea 5:10, God's wrath is poured out like water on unjust leaders, paralleling the pouring out of wrath in Ezekiel.