Ezekiel 38:16
And thou shalt come up against my people of Israel, as a cloud to cover the land; it shall be in the latter days, and I will bring thee against my land, that the heathen may know me, when I shall be sanctified in thee, O Gog, before their eyes.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 38:23 expands on this same prophecy, detailing God's display of greatness and holiness before the nations.
Ezekiel 38:8 sets the same scene—latter days, restored Israel, and Gog's muster—directly connected to the invasion in 38:16.
Ezekiel 38:9 repeats the cloud-covering-the-land metaphor for Gog's advance, directly reinforcing the invasion imagery.
Ezekiel 38:17 directly states this invasion was foretold by earlier prophets, grounding the vision in prior revelation.
Ezekiel 39:21 continues the Gog prophecy, showing God's glory and judgment made known to all nations.
Ezekiel 36:23 uses nearly identical language about God vindicating His holiness through His acts, directly resonating with this verse.
Ezekiel 39:7 declares God will make His holy name known among Israel and the nations—fulfilling the 'that the nations may know me' purpose of 38:16.
Ezekiel 30:25 has God strengthening Babylon against Egypt so 'they shall know that I am the Lord'—same divine self-revelation purpose as in Ezekiel 38:16.
In 2 Kings 19:19, Hezekiah prays that God's salvation would make all kingdoms know He alone is God — the same purpose as Gog's defeat in Ezekiel.
Micah 7:15-17 describes nations seeing God's wonders and being ashamed, trembling before Him — exactly the effect of God's vindication against Gog.
Psalm 83:18 explicitly states the same purpose: 'that they may know that you alone are the Most High' — directly mirroring Ezekiel's 'so that the nations may know me'.
Exodus 14:4 shows God hardening Pharaoh's heart to gain glory, a typological pattern where God uses a proud enemy to display His name.
Jeremiah 30:24 speaks of the Lord's anger not turning back until accomplished 'in the latter days'—directly echoes the eschatological framework of Ezekiel 38:16.
Revelation 17:17 shows God putting purpose into kings' hearts — same divine sovereignty over evil rulers as in Ezekiel's Gog prophecy.
Revelation 20:9 depicts the same Gog and Magog battle with fire from heaven — fulfilling Ezekiel's prophecy.
Isaiah 2:2 describes nations streaming to Zion in the latter days—a peaceful gathering opposite Gog's violent march against Israel.
Daniel 8:23 describes a king arising in the latter days — parallel to Gog's invasion in the end times in Ezekiel 38:16.
Daniel 10:14 also uses 'latter days' to describe future events concerning Israel, echoing the eschatological setting here.
Hosea 3:5 speaks of Israel seeking God in the latter days, sharing the same end-times context as this prophecy.
Micah 4:1 envisions the latter days with God's mountain established, a parallel end-times theme.