Ezekiel 7:8
Now will I shortly pour out my fury upon thee, and accomplish mine anger upon thee: and I will judge thee according to thy ways, and will recompense thee for all thine abominations.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 7:3 repeats the same wording about pouring out anger and judging conduct.
In Ezekiel 36:18, God reflects on having poured out wrath on Israel, retrospectively using the same phrase from 7:8.
In Ezekiel 30:15, God pours out wrath on Egypt's city, extending the judgment language from 7:8 to a foreign nation.
In Ezekiel 22:31, God pronounces the same wrath-pouring judgment on Jerusalem, reinforcing 7:8.
In Ezekiel 9:8, the prophet cries out about the outpouring of wrath, directly echoing the judgment language of 7:8.
In Ezekiel 20:33, God declares He will reign with outpoured wrath, directly echoing the language of 7:8.
In Ezekiel 14:19, God warns He will pour out wrath through plague, using the same phrase from 7:8 for a specific judgment.
In Ezekiel 20:21, the same wrath-pouring language applies to the next generation in the wilderness, reinforcing 7:8.
In Ezekiel 20:13, God recounts pouring out wrath on Israel in the wilderness, mirroring the judgment formula from 7:8.
In Ezekiel 20:8, God recalls pouring out wrath on Israel in Egypt, repeating the exact language of 7:8 for past rebellion.
Ezekiel 16:43 reiterates bringing down on their head what they have done, reinforcing judgment.
In Ezekiel 21:31, God's pouring out of indignation repeats the wrath imagery, emphasizing judgment against rebellious nations.
In Ezekiel 18:30, the same 'judge according to your ways' is echoed with a call to repentance, adding an opportunity for turning from transgression.
Ezekiel 9:10 says God will bring down on their heads what they have done, matching 'repay conduct'.
Ezekiel 5:13 also says wrath will be spent and satisfied, directly paralleling the phrasing.
In Ezekiel 36:19, God repeats judging 'according to their ways' as the reason for scattering, reinforcing the principle.
Revelation 16:2-21 depicts bowls of God's wrath poured out, echoing this language of divine judgment.
In Daniel 9:11, the curse from the Law is poured out on Israel for sin—the same concept of divine judgment being executed.
In Hosea 5:10, God pours out wrath on Judah's leaders like a flood—a very similar oracle against the same people.
In Lamentations 4:11, the Lord gives full vent to his wrath, pouring out fierce anger on Zion—directly echoing this judgment.
In Jeremiah 7:20, God pours out wrath on the land and its inhabitants—an identical prophecy of judgment on Judah.
In Isaiah 42:25, God pours out burning anger on Israel who fail to understand—directly parallel to the judgment described here.
In Revelation 14:10, the wine of God's fury is poured out full strength on beast worshipers—a New Testament echo of the same wrath imagery.
In Psalm 79:6, the same 'pour out your wrath' language is used as a plea against foreign nations—a different application of the same judgment imagery.
In Nahum 1:6, God's wrath is poured out like fire, a general theophany of judgment—parallel imagery but not specifically targeting Israel.