Ezekiel 36:2
Thus saith the Lord God; Because the enemy hath said against you, Aha, even the ancient high places are ours in possession:
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 36:5, God responds to this boast by declaring judgment against the nations — immediate continuation.
In Ezekiel 35:10, Edom boasts of possessing Israel's land — same claiming of possession as here.
Ezekiel 35:12 records Edom's contemptuous words against Israel's mountains, saying they are given over to devour — almost identical to the enemy's boast here.
In Ezekiel 25:3, the Ammonites say 'Aha!' over the sanctuary — same mocking exclamation as here against the mountains.
In Ezekiel 26:2, Tyre says 'Aha!' over Jerusalem's fall — another instance of enemy taunt using same word.
Psalm 70:3 prays for shame on those who say 'Aha, aha!' — the same taunt as the enemy's boast against Israel here.
Jeremiah 33:24 reports people saying God rejected Israel — parallel to the enemy's claim that the ancient heights are now theirs, implying rejection.
Jeremiah 48:27 directly states Israel was the object of Moab's ridicule and scorn — exactly the kind of taunt in the enemy's 'Aha!'.
Zephaniah 2:8 echoes the same taunt: enemies boast against Israel's territory. Both describe nations mocking God's people over their land.
Jeremiah 49:1 also involves enemies claiming possession of Israel's land — Ammonites occupy Gad, mirroring the enemy's boast about ancient heights.
In Isaiah 58:14, God promises Israel to ride on the heights — contrast to the enemy's boast of possessing them.
In Habakkuk 3:19, God makes the psalmist tread on high places — a promise of victory, contrasting with enemy's claim.