Ezekiel 23:18
So she discovered her whoredoms, and discovered her nakedness: then my mind was alienated from her, like as my mind was alienated from her sister.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 23:29 describes the judgment that will expose her shame—the consequence of her own exposure in this verse.
Ezekiel 16:36 similarly describes uncovered nakedness in whoring with lovers and idols, linking both chapters' accusations against Jerusalem.
In Deuteronomy 32:19, God abhors Israel for provoking him — the same divine rejection as here.
In Psalm 78:59, God utterly rejects Israel — mirroring the alienation described here.
In Psalm 106:40, God's anger kindles and he abhors his heritage — parallel to God's soul being alienated.
In Jeremiah 6:8, God warns of turning from Jerusalem in disgust — similar to the soul alienation here.
Jeremiah 8:12 condemns shamelessness in committing abominations, directly echoing Oholibah's lack of shame in flaunting her nakedness.
In Jeremiah 12:8, God declares 'I hate her' — a direct echo of the rejection in this verse.
In Jeremiah 15:1, God says his heart won't turn toward them — reinforcing the alienation theme.
In Lamentations 2:7, God spurns his altar and disowns his sanctuary — the same divine rejection.
In Hosea 2:2, God declares Israel not his wife — the ultimate alienation parallel to this verse.
In Amos 6:8, God abhors the pride of Jacob — a similar expression of divine disgust.
Isaiah 3:9 describes sin openly displayed like Sodom, matching Oholibah's public flaunting of her whoredom in 23:18.