Ezekiel 28:10
Thou shalt die the deaths of the uncircumcised by the hand of strangers: for I have spoken it, saith the Lord God.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 28:7 specifies the 'strangers' who will bring death—the terrible nations God sends to defile Tyre’s splendor, fulfilling the threat in verse 10.
Ezekiel 32:19 echoes the same fate—'laid with the uncircumcised'—applying it to Egypt, showing consistent judgment on proud nations.
Ezekiel 32:21 depicts the uncircumcised in Sheol speaking, reinforcing the destiny of those who die as uncircumcised foreigners.
Ezekiel 32:24-30 lists nations lying among the uncircumcised, expanding the same judgment theme introduced in 28:10.
Ezekiel 30:12 again uses 'by the hand of strangers' for judgment on Egypt, reinforcing the same prophetic theme of God using foreigners to punish proud nations.
Ezekiel 11:9 uses the same phrase 'hand of strangers' for judgment on rebellious Israelites, showing God’s consistent use of foreigners as agents of punishment.
Jeremiah 9:26 lists the uncircumcised nations and Israel’s uncircumcised heart, broadening the shameful 'death of the uncircumcised' to a spiritual condition.
Acts 7:51 picks up the OT rhetoric of 'uncircumcised in heart', applying it to those resisting the Spirit—echoing the reproach of uncircumcision.
Jeremiah 9:25 announces punishment on those circumcised yet uncircumcised in heart—linking judgment to the uncircumcised, similar to Ezekiel.
Jeremiah 25:9 describes God bringing Nebuchadnezzar against Judah—another instance of 'strangers' as instruments of divine judgment, though against a different nation.