Ezekiel 24:8
That it might cause fury to come up to take vengeance; I have set her blood upon the top of a rock, that it should not be covered.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 8:18 follows with God's pitiless judgment — the execution of the wrath that 24:8 has provoked.
In Ezekiel 16:38, God brings blood upon Jerusalem in fury—directly echoing the blood set on the rock to stir up wrath.
Ezekiel 22:31 details the outpouring of God's fiery wrath — the direct consequence of the blood-shedding in 24:8.
In Ezekiel 23:45, righteous men judge those who shed blood—the same bloodguilt exposed on the rock in Ezekiel 24:8.
Ezekiel 5:13 describes God's wrath being fully spent — the same divine anger that 24:8 stirs up by setting blood on the rock.
In Ezekiel 16:37, God exposes Jerusalem's shame to her lovers—a parallel public display of guilt leading to judgment, like blood on the rock.
Ezekiel 22:30 notes the absence of an intercessor to avert judgment — the gap that allows the wrath of 24:8 to fall.
Ezekiel 8:17 shows the people's detestable acts arousing God's anger — parallel to the provocation of wrath in 24:8.
In 2 Chronicles 36:17, the Babylonian conquest fulfills the judgment symbolized by blood on the rock—God's vengeance executed.
Revelation 17:1-6 depicts Babylon drunk with saints' blood, mirroring Jerusalem's exposed blood here — both cities face divine judgment for bloodshed.
Revelation 18:5-10 shows Babylon's sins remembered and judged, echoing the public exposure of Jerusalem's blood for vengeance.
Isaiah 26:21 declares the earth will disclose blood — a direct parallel to God setting blood on a bare rock here to expose and avenge.
Jeremiah 44:6 shows God's wrath poured out on Jerusalem, echoing the vengeance theme of blood crying out.
Hosea 12:14 says God will leave bloodguilt on Ephraim, matching the unavenged blood left on the rock here.