Ezekiel 35:15
As thou didst rejoice at the inheritance of the house of Israel, because it was desolate, so will I do unto thee: thou shalt be desolate, O mount Seir, and all Idumea, even all of it: and they shall know that I am the Lord.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 35:9 reaffirms the perpetual desolation on Edom within the same prophecy, echoing the same verdict.
Ezekiel 35:3 pronounces judgment on Mount Seir; this verse expands it by adding the reason—their rejoicing over Israel.
Ezekiel 36:5 also targets Edom's joy over Israel's land, continuing the same judgment theme against Edom.
Ezekiel 36:2-5 condemns Edom and others for gloating over Israel’s desolation, directly continuing the judgment from this verse.
Ezekiel 6:7 ends with the same recognition formula 'you shall know that I am the Lord' — a refrain used throughout Ezekiel's judgments.
Ezekiel 25:6 also condemns a nation (Ammon) for rejoicing over Israel's fall — directly parallel to Edom's offense here.
Ezekiel 25:11 concludes Moab's judgment with 'then they will know that I am the Lord' — the same recognition formula as here.
Ezekiel 37:6 uses the same 'you shall know that I am the Lord' formula but for Israel's restoration — contrasting judgment with resurrection.
Obadiah 1:15 declares retribution—'as you did, it will be done to you'—matching the logic of this verse exactly.
Psalm 137:7 recalls Edom’s glee at Jerusalem’s fall—the exact sin that provokes God’s judgment here.
Obadiah 1:12 warns Edom not to gloat over Judah’s ruin—the very sin Edom committed, leading to God’s response.
Lamentations 4:21 directly addresses Edom’s rejoicing and prophesies their desolation—a near parallel to this verse.
Jeremiah 49:17 pronounces a similar desolation on Edom, with passersby horrified — reinforcing the same judgment against Edom for its pride.
Obadiah 1:10 directly addresses Edom's violence against Jacob and its resulting shame — the same judgment theme against Edom.
Proverbs 17:5 states the principle that those who gloat at calamity will be punished—the very reason for Edom’s doom.
Isaiah 34:6 continues the Edom judgment with sacrificial slaughter imagery, reinforcing the same oracle of doom.
Isaiah 34:5 describes God's sword descending on Edom in judgment, paralleling the desolation pronounced here.
Isaiah 14:29 warns Philistia not to rejoice — the same motif of rejoicing over Israel's calamity leading to judgment.