Ezekiel 7:2
Also, thou son of man, thus saith the Lord God unto the land of Israel; An end, the end is come upon the four corners of the land.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 7:3, the next verse elaborates on the end — God's anger and judgment for abominations, continuing the announcement.
In Ezekiel 7:5, 'Disaster after disaster' follows as a further declaration of the coming judgment from the same prophecy.
In Ezekiel 7:6, the repeated 'An end has come' echoes and intensifies the same proclamation.
Ezekiel 7:11 continues this oracle, describing violence as the rod of wickedness bringing destruction — same judgment context.
In Ezekiel 40:2, the land of Israel appears again, but in a vision of restoration, contrasting the judgment here.
In Ezekiel 11:13, Pelatiah's death prompts Ezekiel to ask if God will make a full end, echoing the 'end' announced here.
In Ezekiel 21:2, a similar command to prophesy against the land of Israel reinforces the same judgment message.
Ezekiel 12:23 declares the days are near and every vision fulfilled — reinforcing the immediate end declared here.
Ezekiel 39:8 echoes this same 'end has come' language, confirming that God's declared judgment is certain.
In Ezekiel 12:22, the people's proverb doubting prophecy contrasts with the certainty of the end announced here.
Ezekiel 20:17 recalls God sparing Israel in the wilderness — contrast with the unstoppable end here.
Ezekiel 21:4 says God's sword cuts off both righteous and wicked — similar sweeping judgment across the land.
Ezekiel 21:7 describes hearts melting at the coming news — same impending doom as the end announced here.
Jeremiah 51:13 pronounces 'your end has come' upon Babylon, applying the same judgment language to a different nation.
Amos 8:2 declares 'The end has come upon my people Israel' almost verbatim, reinforcing the same prophetic announcement.
Lamentations 4:18 explicitly says 'our end had come' during the siege, directly fulfilling Ezekiel's prophecy of the end.
In Deuteronomy 32:20, God's promise to hide his face and see their end mirrors the judgment here for Israel's unfaithfulness.
Hosea 9:7 similarly announces that the days of punishment have come for Israel, matching Ezekiel's declaration of an end.
Joel 1:15 also proclaims the nearness of the day of the Lord and destruction, paralleling Ezekiel's imminent judgment.
Amos 7:8 depicts God setting a plumb line to measure Israel for judgment, a parallel theme of divine punishment on the people.
Matthew 24:33 uses 'near' language for the Son of Man's coming, echoing Ezekiel's imminence of the end.
Revelation 14:7 announces that the hour of God's judgment has come, a thematic parallel to Ezekiel's end declaration.