Ezekiel 23:10
These discovered her nakedness: they took her sons and her daughters, and slew her with the sword: and she became famous among women; for they had executed judgment upon her.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 23:29 repeats the same judgment — nakedness, taking children, hatred from lovers — expanding on v10's description.
Ezekiel 23:47 describes a similar judgment on Oholibah—killing sons and daughters with the sword—paralleling Oholah's fate.
Ezekiel 23:48 shows the outcome: lewdness ceases as a lesson, following the judgment that made Oholah a byword.
Ezekiel 16:37-41 details the same judgment — exposing nakedness, killing with sword — as executed on Oholah in v10.
Ezekiel 16:40 describes a similar judgment — gathering a crowd, stoning, and cutting with swords — mirroring Oholah's punishment here.
Ezekiel 16:41 continues the parallel: burning houses and ceasing prostitution, directly echoing Oholah's fate in the allegory.
Hosea 2:10 also depicts God exposing Israel's nakedness to her lovers, mirroring the judgment on Oholah.
Hosea 2:3 uses the same stripping metaphor — threatening to expose her nakedness, echoing the judgment here.