Ezekiel 30:8
And they shall know that I am the Lord, when I have set a fire in Egypt, and when all her helpers shall be destroyed.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 30:6, the fall of Egypt's supporters is announced — verse 8 then specifies the fire that confirms God's identity.
Ezekiel 30:14 specifies setting fire in Zoan and executing judgments in No, directly continuing the fire judgment on Egypt.
Ezekiel 30:16 repeats the phrase 'set fire in Egypt' and details the distress on its cities, reinforcing the same judgment.
In Ezekiel 30:26, the same 'know that I am the LORD' phrase closes the chapter's judgment on Egypt, reinforcing the theme within the same oracle.
In Ezekiel 29:9, the same refrain 'they shall know that I am the LORD' appears in the judgment on Egypt for claiming the Nile as its own.
In Ezekiel 25:5, the same judgment formula 'they shall know that I am the LORD' concludes Ammon's oracle, linking Egypt's fate to a pattern of divine recognition.
In Ezekiel 39:6, fire sent on Magog yields the same recognition formula, expanding the principle that fire judgments lead to knowing God.
In Amos 2:5, even Judah faces fire judgment — showing the same standard applies to God's own people, not just Egypt.
Lamentations 4:11 speaks of God kindling a fire in Zion that devours its foundations—fire judgment on Jerusalem, paralleling Egypt's judgment.
In Jeremiah 47:4, the same concept of cutting off 'every helper' appears for Philistia's allies, echoing the collapse of Egypt's supporters.