Ezekiel 7:9
And mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity: I will recompense thee according to thy ways and thine abominations that are in the midst of thee; and ye shall know that I am the Lord that smiteth.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 7:4, the exact same statement about God's eye not sparing and punishing according to ways appears, emphasizing certainty.
In Ezekiel 7:3, the same recompense language 'according to thy ways' and 'abominations' appears earlier in the same chapter.
Ezekiel 24:14 repeats 'I will not spare' and 'according to your ways you will be judged', directly echoing Ezekiel 7:9.
Ezekiel 23:49 uses 'return your lewdness upon you' and 'you shall know that I am the LORD', mirroring judgment and self-revelation in Ezekiel 7:9.
Ezekiel 22:31 says God 'returned their way upon their heads', echoing the punishment according to ways in Ezekiel 7:9.
In Ezekiel 18:30, the same 'judge according to your ways' phrase appears, reinforcing God's principle of personal retribution.
In Ezekiel 9:10, God says 'mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity' and recompense, directly paralleling 7:9.
In Ezekiel 5:11, God uses the identical phrase 'neither shall mine eye spare, neither will I have any pity' for defiling the sanctuary.
In Ezekiel 9:5, the command 'let not your eye spare, neither have ye pity' repeats the no-mercy directive for the executioners.
In Ezekiel 16:59, God deals with Israel according to their covenant-breaking, paralleling the repayment for abominations here.
In Ezekiel 16:43, God recompenses 'thy way upon thine head' for forgetting his benefits — a similar judgment principle without the 'no pity' phrase.
In Revelation 20:13, final judgment 'according to what they had done' directly parallels the promise of judgment according to ways.
In Lamentations 3:43, God is described as slaying without pity, matching the 'no pity' statement in Ezekiel 7:9.
In Lamentations 2:17, the same 'not pitied' phrase appears, showing God's fulfilled judgment without mercy on Jerusalem.
Lamentations 2:2 describes the Lord swallowing up Jacob without mercy — the same merciless judgment that Ezekiel 7:9 declares with 'my eye will not spare'.
Jeremiah 21:7 repeats 'not pity or spare' and adds that God strikes through Babylon — matching Ezekiel 7:9's striking and refusal to spare.
Jeremiah 13:14 echoes the same phrase 'I will not pity or spare' — the identical declaration of merciless judgment found in Ezekiel 7:9.
Jeremiah 5:9 asks rhetorically whether God should not punish — affirming the same divine resolve to punish that Ezekiel 7:9 states directly.
Psalm 78:50 recounts God not sparing from plague — the same divine refusal to spare that Ezekiel 7:9 applies to Judah's judgment.
In Deuteronomy 29:20, God's anger smokes and He will not forgive — the same refusal to spare that Ezekiel 7:9 declares.
In Galatians 6:7, reaping what one sows echoes the OT principle of judgment according to deeds, applied universally.