Ezekiel 25:5
And I will make Rabbah a stable for camels, and the Ammonites a couchingplace for flocks: and ye shall know that I am the Lord.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 25:11 immediately follows with a judgment on Moab using the same formula 'then they will know that I am the Lord'.
Ezekiel 25:17 ends the chapter with a judgment on Philistia and the same recognition formula.
Ezekiel 25:8 immediately follows with judgment on Moab, continuing the series of oracles against Israel's neighbors.
Ezekiel 21:20 also names Rabbah as a target of Babylon's sword, directly linking to the judgment on Ammon.
In Ezekiel 35:9, the same judgment formula 'I will make... a desolation... then you will know that I am the Lord' is applied to Edom, mirroring the Ammon judgment.
Ezekiel 23:49 concludes with the same recognition formula 'then you will know that I am the Sovereign Lord' after judgment on Israel.
Ezekiel 24:24 shares the recognition formula 'you shall know that I am the LORD,' concluding this oracle as well.
Ezekiel 26:6 ends with the same recognition formula 'then they will know that I am the LORD,' common in judgment oracles.
Ezekiel 38:23 also ends with 'then they will know that I am the Lord', but here after God shows greatness in defeating Gog.
Isaiah 17:2 similarly describes flocks lying down in forsaken cities, mirroring the desolation for Ammon's land.
Isaiah 32:14 uses the same imagery of flocks pasturing in a deserted city, echoing Rabbah's fate.
Zephaniah 2:14 also portrays flocks lying down in a ruined city, paralleling the judgment on Rabbah.
Amos 1:14 also prophesies judgment on Rabbah with fire, a parallel prophecy against the same Ammonite capital.
2 Samuel 12:26 records David's siege of Rabbah, the same city Ezekiel prophesies will become a camel stable.
Zephaniah 2:15 continues the theme of a proud city reduced to a lair for beasts, similar to Ammon's judgment.