Ezekiel 27:32
And in their wailing they shall take up a lamentation for thee, and lament over thee, saying, What city is like Tyrus, like the destroyed in the midst of the sea?
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 27:2 commands Ezekiel to take up a lament; here in v32 the mourners begin that lament over Tyre.
Ezekiel 27:26 describes the shipwreck that causes the lament in v32 — the east wind breaks the ship in the deep.
Ezekiel 27:30 describes the mariners' mourning actions — dust and ashes — which directly introduce the lament in v32.
Ezekiel 26:17 contains a similar lament over Tyre with the same 'take up a lament' phrasing.
Ezekiel 26:4 prophesies Tyre's walls destroyed and rubble scraped — the lament in 27:32 mourns that fulfilled destruction.
Ezekiel 26:5 continues the prophecy — Tyre becomes a place for spreading fishnets, the same fate lamented in 27:32.
Ezekiel 26:3 uses the sea-wave metaphor for attacking nations — the shipwreck allegory in 27:32 builds on that imagery.
Ezekiel 28:12 takes up another lament over Tyre's king — same prophetic genre, different focus.
Ezekiel 32:2 laments Pharaoh with sea-monster imagery — a parallel lament structure for another doomed leader.
Revelation 18:18 mirrors the lament — 'Who is like this great city?' — as Babylon falls, directly echoing Tyre's judgment.
Lamentations 2:13 echoes the same lament formula — 'Who is like...' — over Jerusalem's destruction, comparing wounds to the sea.