Ezekiel 32:4
Then will I leave thee upon the land, I will cast thee forth upon the open field, and will cause all the fowls of the heaven to remain upon thee, and I will fill the beasts of the whole earth with thee.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 39:17-20, God commands birds and beasts to feast on the slain, expanding the same imagery into a sacrificial meal.
In Ezekiel 39:4, birds and beasts devour Gog's army, using the exact same language of divine judgment on enemies.
In Ezekiel 31:13, birds and beasts feed on Assyria's ruin — identical imagery to Egypt's fate, showing a repeated judgment motif.
Ezekiel 29:5 is nearly identical — Pharaoh cast into the wilderness as food for birds and beasts — directly reinforcing this judgment scene.
In Ezekiel 39:5, Gog's army falls on the open field, echoing the 'open fields' of 32:4 where the body is left.
In Ezekiel 31:12, the same judgment pattern of being left on the ground applies to Assyria, reinforcing God's consistent treatment of proud nations.
Jeremiah 25:33 describes those pierced by the Lord becoming dung on the ground—same shameful exposure as Ezekiel.
In Revelation 19:17, birds are summoned to feast on the defeated—directly echoing the same divine judgment imagery from Ezekiel.
In 1 Samuel 17:44-46, Goliath and David both threaten to feed enemies to birds/beasts — a common taunt that Ezekiel applies as divine judgment.
Jeremiah 8:2 says bodies are spread like dung, unburied—direct parallel to Ezekiel's scene of leaving the corpse on the field.
Isaiah 66:24 shows dead bodies as an eternal abhorrence—unburied corpses parallel to Ezekiel's exposed carcasses.
Isaiah 18:6 explicitly says bodies left to birds of prey and beasts—almost identical imagery to Ezekiel 32:4.
Isaiah 14:19 depicts a king cast out from his grave, left among the slain—same fate of dishonored exposure as in Ezekiel.
Psalm 79:3 laments unburied dead in Jerusalem — same imagery of corpses exposed to beasts as in Ezekiel's judgment on Egypt.
In Psalm 79:2, God's servants' bodies are given to birds and beasts — a lament that uses the same imagery as Ezekiel's judgment on Egypt.
Revelation 19:18 specifies the flesh of kings and mighty men as the birds' prey—mirroring the judgment on Pharaoh's army.
Jeremiah 34:20 repeats the exact phrase: dead bodies as meat for birds and beasts—identical judgment formula.
1 Kings 21:24 declares birds will eat Ahab's household—same judgment motif of corpses devoured, but a different target.