Ezekiel 5:15
So it shall be a reproach and a taunt, an instruction and an astonishment unto the nations that are round about thee, when I shall execute judgments in thee in anger and in fury and in furious rebukes. I the Lord have spoken it.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 5:17 lists the specific judgments (famine, beasts, sword) that cause the reproach and horror described in verse 15.
Ezekiel 14:8 uses 'sign and a byword'—the same idea of becoming a public warning and object of scorn as in 5:15.
Ezekiel 22:4 repeats 'reproach to the nations' verbatim, reinforcing the same judgment on Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 11:9 echoes the 'execute judgments' phrase, referring to God's judgment on Jerusalem through foreigners.
Deuteronomy 29:24-28 explains why nations ask about God’s judgment—the same warning and horror.
1 Kings 9:7 says Israel will become a proverb and byword—the same reproach and taunt.
Psalm 79:4 laments being a reproach and mockery—identical to the reproach and taunt.
Jeremiah 22:8 describes nations asking why God destroyed the city—the same warning to surrounding nations.
Jeremiah 22:9 gives the answer: they forsook the covenant—the reason behind the reproach.
Leviticus 26:32 says land desolation will cause astonishment among enemies — directly echoed in Ezekiel's 'astonishment' to nations.
Jeremiah 23:40 uses the same 'everlasting reproach' for false prophets, echoing the perpetual shame threatened in Ezekiel's judgment.
In Zechariah 8:13, Israel's curse among nations is reversed into a blessing—the same reproach transformed into favor.