Ezekiel 39:6
And I will send a fire on Magog, and among them that dwell carelessly in the isles: and they shall know that I am the Lord.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 30:8 also uses fire judgment on Egypt with the same 'they shall know I am the Lord' formula.
Ezekiel 38:6 lists Gog's allies including Gomer and Beth-togarmah—part of the same Gog coalition that is judged in 39:6.
In Ezekiel 38:11, Gog targets those 'dwelling securely'—exactly the phrase used in 39:6 for the coastlands who are judged by fire.
Ezekiel 38:19-22 details the broader judgment on Gog including fire, hail, and pestilence—this fire judgment on Magog and coastlands is part of that same event.
Ezekiel 37:6 uses the same 'you shall know that I am the Lord' but for Israel's resurrection — a stark contrast to judgment here.
In Ezekiel 38:13, nations question Gog's invasion—this is part of the same Gog prophecy context as the fire judgment in 39:6.
Ezekiel 30:9 sends terror on 'unsuspecting' Cush — similar to judging secure coastlands. Both target complacent peoples.
In Ezekiel 30:16, God likewise sends fire to judge Egypt, echoing the same pattern of divine judgment by fire on rebellious nations.
Jeremiah 49:31 targets a nation 'at ease' and 'dwelling securely' — exactly matching the secure coastlands judged here.
In Revelation 20:9, fire from heaven consumes the enemies, fulfilling the judgment on Magog — a typological pattern of final divine judgment.
In Amos 1:4, God sends fire on Hazael's house, using the same 'send fire' formula for judgment on Damascus—a parallel pattern.
In Amos 1:7, God sends fire on Gaza's wall—another instance of the same prophetic judgment formula.
In Amos 1:10, God sends fire on Tyre's wall—consistent pattern of fire judgment on hostile nations.