Ezekiel 39:21
And I will set my glory among the heathen, and all the heathen shall see my judgment that I have executed, and my hand that I have laid upon them.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 39:13 mentions 'the day I display my glory' in the burial context—directly reinforcing the glory display from verse 21.
Ezekiel 38:23 says God will show His greatness and holiness, making Himself known — identical to setting His glory among nations here.
Ezekiel 36:23 also shows God vindicating His holiness among the nations, exactly the same purpose as setting His glory here.
Ezekiel 25:11 applies the 'they shall know I am the LORD' formula to Moab—a specific instance of the universal judgment in 39:21.
Ezekiel 30:19 uses the same 'know I am the LORD' pattern for Egypt—illustrating the principle of judgment leading to recognition.
Ezekiel 30:25 again shows God strengthening Babylon to judge Egypt, concluding 'they shall know I am the LORD'—same revelatory judgment theme.
In Exodus 14:4, God gains glory over Pharaoh and his army so Egypt knows He is LORD — the same pattern of displaying glory through judgment.
In 1 Samuel 5:7, the Philistines see God's hand is heavy on them in judgment — exactly the kind of global recognition Ezekiel describes.
In 1 Samuel 5:11, the Philistines declare God's hand was very heavy — a direct parallel to nations perceiving God's punishing hand.
In Isaiah 37:20, Hezekiah prays that all kingdoms may know God alone is God through deliverance — similar purpose of global acknowledgment.
Isaiah 66:18 explicitly says nations will come and see God's glory—a direct parallel to Ezekiel's promise of global revelation.
Malachi 1:5 echoes this: nations will see and declare God's greatness beyond Israel's borders, fulfilling the promise of glory among nations.
Isaiah 45:6 declares God's purpose that all people know He alone is the Lord—identical to Ezekiel's goal of nations seeing His glory.
Isaiah 25:3 says strong peoples will glorify God in fear after His judgment—mirroring the nations' response to God's displayed glory.
Psalm 79:10 pleads for God's avenging to be known among the nations—directly echoing Ezekiel's aim of displaying glory through judgment.
In Exodus 9:14, God sends plagues so Pharaoh knows there is none like Him — a similar revelation of glory through judgment.
In Malachi 1:11, God's name is great among the nations through worship, while here through judgment — both show God's glory worldwide.