Ezekiel 8:10
So I went in and saw; and behold every form of creeping things, and abominable beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel, pourtrayed upon the wall round about.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 23:14 describes men portrayed on a wall in red — a very similar scene to the wall carvings Ezekiel sees.
Ezekiel 11:12 rebukes Israel for following pagan standards — the mindset that led to the idolatry Ezekiel sees.
Exodus 20:4 forbids making carved images of anything on earth—the very practice depicted here as an abomination.
Leviticus 11:10-12 lists sea creatures as detestable; the images here include such unclean animals, deepening the sense of defilement.
Leviticus 11:29-31 specifically lists creeping things as unclean—the same category portrayed here on the temple walls.
Leviticus 11:42-44 calls crawling creatures detestable and commands holiness; these images are of such detestable things.
Deuteronomy 4:18 prohibits making an image of any creeping thing—exactly what is depicted here as an abomination.
Isaiah 57:6-10 describes Israel's idolatry with stones and under trees—parallel abominations showing the same spiritual adultery.
Jeremiah 16:18 uses 'detestable idols' and 'abominations' — the very terms describing the creeping things Ezekiel saw.
Romans 1:23 mentions exchanging God's glory for images of 'creeping things' — directly echoing Ezekiel's vision of such idols.
2 Chronicles 15:8 records Asa removing 'detestable idols' — contrasting with Ezekiel finding them still in the temple.
Jeremiah 2:27 shows Israel calling wood and stone 'father' — the same idolatrous heart behind the images on Ezekiel's wall.
Jeremiah 3:9 says Israel committed adultery with stone and wood — mirroring the idolatry Ezekiel witnesses in God's house.
Deuteronomy 14:3 commands not to eat any abomination; the images here are of abominable animals, linking idolatry to dietary defilement.