Ezekiel 9:10
And as for me also, mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity, but I will recompense their way upon their head.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 9:5, the command to strike without pity directly precedes this declaration, showing consistency between the command and God's resolve.
In Ezekiel 22:31, God says 'I have returned their way upon their heads' – the same principle of recompense for sin.
In Ezekiel 11:21, the exact phrase 'bring their deeds upon their own heads' occurs, mirroring the conclusion of 9:10.
In Ezekiel 8:18, 'My eye will not spare' is repeated, emphasizing God's refusal to hear their cries.
In Ezekiel 5:11, the same phrase 'I will not spare' appears in an earlier judgment oracle against Jerusalem.
In Ezekiel 7:4, the identical wording 'My eye will not spare, nor will I have pity' is followed by 'I will bring your ways upon you'.
In Ezekiel 7:9, the same 'eye will not spare' statement is followed by punishment according to ways – a direct parallel.
Ezekiel 24:14 repeats the same judgment formula—'I will not spare nor have pity'—reinforcing God's unwavering decree against Jerusalem.
Ezekiel 20:17 says God 'spared them from destruction' — the opposite of Ezekiel 9:10's no pity or spare.
Ezekiel 16:43 uses 'returned your deeds upon your head' — the exact recompense phrase from Ezekiel 9:10.
Ezekiel 23:49 says 'they shall repay you for your lewdness' — a similar principle of recompense for sin.
In Ezekiel 21:31, God pours out indignation and wrath – a different expression of judgment but similar intent.
In 2 Chronicles 6:23, Solomon prays for God to 'bring his way upon his own head' — nearly identical phrasing to this judgment.
Lamentations 3:43 speaks of 'killing without pity' — mirroring the unrelenting wrath declared in Ezekiel 9:10.
Lamentations 2:17 states God 'thrown down without pity' — explicitly fulfilling the same merciless judgment theme.
Jeremiah 21:7 repeats 'not pity them or spare them' — reinforcing the same divine decree of unrelenting destruction.
Jeremiah 13:14 declares 'I will not pity or spare' — directly matching Ezekiel 9:10's language of merciless judgment.
In Deuteronomy 29:20, 'The LORD will not spare him' — the same phrase 'not spare' links directly to this judgment.
Zechariah 11:6 echoes God's refusal to pity, applied to the land's inhabitants, matching Ezekiel's unrelenting judgment.
Lamentations 2:2 says God 'swallowed up without mercy' — a vivid parallel to Ezekiel's no-pity judgment.
In Isaiah 13:18, Babylon's army 'shall not spare children; their eye shall not pity' — echoing the same language of no pity.
In Hebrews 10:30, the NT quotes 'Vengeance is mine; I will repay' — confirming the same divine retribution theme.
Isaiah 30:14 uses shattered pottery to depict irreversible judgment, echoing God's refusal to spare in Ezekiel 9:10.
In Psalm 78:50, God 'spared not their soul from death' — a similar expression of God withholding mercy.
Hosea 2:4 uses similar language of divine 'no mercy' toward children of whoredom, broadening the theme of God withholding compassion from the unfaithful.