Ezekiel 9:5
And to the others he said in mine hearing, Go ye after him through the city, and smite: let not your eye spare, neither have ye pity:
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 9:10 repeats the exact phrase 'my eye will not spare, nor will I have pity' — directly reinforcing the same command.
Ezekiel 8:18 also says 'my eye will not spare, nor will I have pity' — showing the same divine response to abominations.
Ezekiel 7:9 repeats 'my eye will not spare, nor will I have pity' — linking the judgment decree across chapters.
Ezekiel 7:4 says 'My eye will not spare you, nor will I have pity' — matching the wording of the command here.
Ezekiel 5:11 contains the identical declaration 'My eye will not spare, and I will have no pity' — a consistent judgment theme.
Ezekiel 43:3 explicitly references the vision of God coming to destroy the city — the same vision that included the command in this verse.
Ezekiel 21:3 states God will cut off both righteous and wicked — unlike this passage where the righteous are spared.
Ezekiel 24:14 says 'I will not spare; I will not relent' — echoing the no-pity theme though without the 'eye' phrase.
1 Kings 18:40 has Elijah seize and kill the prophets of Baal — a direct parallel to the 'strike without sparing' command given here.
Lamentations 2:21 directly echoes the command 'without pity' and describes young and old slain — the outcome of this judgment.
Deuteronomy 13:8 commands not to spare or pity an enticer to idolatry — using the same phrase 'do not let your eye spare' as here.
Lamentations 2:20 laments the horrific slaughter in Jerusalem — the tragic fulfillment of the commanded merciless killing here.
Jeremiah 21:7 also depicts God handing Judah to Babylon with no pity — a parallel merciless judgment by divine decree.
Jeremiah 13:14 has God saying 'I will not pity or spare or have compassion'—virtually identical to the command here, reinforcing the severity.
Isaiah 13:18 says 'their eyes will not pity children'—identical language of withholding mercy, applied to Babylon's destruction.
Isaiah 9:19 says 'no one spares his brother'—directly echoes the command here to spare no one in judgment.
2 Chronicles 36:17 describes the Babylonians killing without sparing young or old — mirroring the 'no pity' directive in this vision.
2 Kings 10:25 has Jehu order the guards to kill all Baal worshipers without escape — a strong parallel to the merciless execution command here.
Jeremiah 25:18 includes Jerusalem among those who drank God's cup of wrath — the same judgment context as the slaughter here.
Revelation 16:1 commands the angels to pour out God's wrath — a parallel scene of executing divine judgment.