Ezekiel 26:12
And they shall make a spoil of thy riches, and make a prey of thy merchandise: and they shall break down thy walls, and destroy thy pleasant houses: and they shall lay thy stones and thy timber and thy dust in the midst of the water.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 26:5 prophesies Tyre becoming plunder; verse 12 details the plundering and destruction that fulfills it.
In Ezekiel 26:4, walls are destroyed and rubble scraped—this is the direct prophecy of the destruction described here.
In Ezekiel 26:14, Tyre becomes a bare rock never rebuilt—the permanent outcome of the plundering and demolition here.
In Ezekiel 27:34, this same imagery of Tyre's wealth sinking into the sea echoes the plundering and demolition described here.
Ezekiel 27:3 records Tyre's boast 'I am perfect in beauty,' contrasting with the destruction and plunder described in Ezekiel 26:12.
Isaiah 23:11 says the Lord stretched out his hand against Phoenicia to destroy her fortresses, directly parallel to the walls being broken down here.
Zechariah 9:4 declares the Lord will take away Tyre's possessions and destroy her power, directly echoing the plunder and demolition here.
Revelation 18:11-13 mourns the loss of Babylon's merchandise in words drawn from Tyre's judgment, mirroring the looting of wealth here.
In Amos 1:10, fire on Tyre's walls parallels the judgment of plunder and destruction here — both prophecies against Tyre.
Zechariah 9:3 describes Tyre's heaped-up silver and gold, showing the immense wealth that is then plundered in this verse.
Isaiah 23:8 asks who planned Tyre's downfall, emphasizing the irony that the city of merchant-princes is now plundered, matching this verse's description.
Isaiah 23:18 says Tyre's profits will be set apart for the Lord, contrasting the plundering of her wealth by enemies here.
In Nahum 2:9, Nineveh's silver and gold are plundered without limit—parallels the looting of Tyre under judgment.