Ezekiel 39:24
According to their uncleanness and according to their transgressions have I done unto them, and hid my face from them.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 36:19 describes God judging Israel according to their conduct—directly parallel to 'according to their uncleanness' here.
2 Kings 17:7-23 recounts the historical exile of Israel due to sin—the reality that this verse summarizes.
Isaiah 59:18 says God repays according to deeds—exactly the logic of 'according to their... I have done' in Ezekiel 39:24.
Jeremiah 2:19 says their own wickedness corrects them—reinforcing that judgment is a direct consequence of sin.
Jeremiah 4:18 states their ways have procured disaster—identical teaching that sin causes God's judgment.
Jeremiah 5:25 says sins withhold good things—parallels God hiding His face, both showing sin blocks blessing.
Deuteronomy 31:17 says God will hide His face when Israel sins—identical phrase, showing this judgment was prophesied long before.
Isaiah 8:17 also speaks of God hiding His face from the house of Jacob, echoing the same judgment for uncleanness.
Isaiah 54:8 repeats 'hid my face' but adds mercy, showing God's wrath is temporary and followed by kindness.
Isaiah 59:2 directly ties sins to God hiding His face, matching the cause and effect in Ezekiel's judgment.
Daniel 9:5-10 confesses that exile came because of rebellion—the same rationale for God hiding His face in Ezekiel.
Isaiah 1:20 warns that rebellion brings the sword—complementing God hiding His face as judgment for sin.
Isaiah 3:11 pronounces woe on the wicked, whose own hands bring harm—mirroring God's response to uncleanness and transgressions.
Isaiah 12:1 contrasts God's anger turned away with the hiding of face, celebrating restoration after judgment.
Jeremiah 2:17 attributes Israel's suffering to forsaking God—the same cause as God hiding His face here.