Ezekiel 25:2
Son of man, set thy face against the Ammonites, and prophesy against them;
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 25:10 continues the Ammon judgment within the same chapter, describing their fate to be forgotten among nations.
Ezekiel 6:2 uses the same command 'set your face against' for Israel's mountains. This parallel formula shows a consistent prophetic pattern.
Ezekiel 21:28-32 delivers the full prophecy against Ammon, directly fulfilling the command given here.
Ezekiel 38:2 uses the same prophetic command 'set your face against' for Gog, mirroring the structure of the oracle against Ammon.
Ezekiel 29:2 again uses 'set your face against' for Egypt—same prophetic pattern extended to a major power.
Ezekiel 28:21 commands 'set your face against Sidon'—identical phrasing as against Ammon, showing a series of judgments on neighboring nations.
Ezekiel 26:2 begins a judgment oracle against Tyre—same prophetic formula against a different nation for gloating over Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 35:2 uses identical phrasing for a prophecy against Mount Seir (Edom), another nearby nation.
Ezekiel 20:46 uses the same 'set your face' command against the south, mirroring the structure here against Ammon.
Ezekiel 21:2 repeats the 'set your face and prophesy' formula, but against Jerusalem instead of Ammon.
Zephaniah 2:8-11 also pronounces judgment on Ammon, echoing the same theme of divine retribution for pride and hostility.
Amos 1:13-15 is another oracle against Ammon for their atrocities—showing this judgment is consistent across prophets.
Jeremiah 49:1-6 delivers a full judgment oracle against Ammon, parallel in theme and target to Ezekiel's prophecy.
Jeremiah 25:21 names Ammon among nations forced to drink the cup of God's wrath, reinforcing the judgment.
Jeremiah 9:26 continues the same oracle, including Ammon in the indictment of uncircumcised hearts.
Genesis 19:38 records the Ammonites' origin as descendants of Lot's younger daughter, grounding the people addressed here.
Jeremiah 40:14 adds that the Ammonite king sent Ishmael to assassinate Gedaliah, illustrating Ammon's ongoing hostility against Judah.
Jeremiah 40:11 records Ammonite involvement in the murder of Gedaliah—historical background for why judgment was deserved.
Jeremiah 27:3 lists Ammon's king among those told to submit to Babylon, showing Ammon's political context.