Nahum 3:5
Behold, I am against thee, saith the Lord of hosts; and I will discover thy skirts upon thy face, and I will shew the nations thy nakedness, and the kingdoms thy shame.
Cross-references
Nahum 2:13 also begins 'Behold, I am against you' and describes military destruction—the same divine declaration of judgment against Nineveh as in 3:5.
Isaiah 47:3 uses identical language of exposing nakedness as divine judgment against Babylon, mirroring Nahum's oracle against Nineveh.
Jeremiah 13:22 attributes lifted skirts to Judah's many sins, matching the same metaphor of public shame for disobedience.
Jeremiah 13:26 nearly quotes Nahum 3:5: 'I will pull up your skirts over your face that your shame may be seen.'
Ezekiel 16:37 depicts Jerusalem's nakedness exposed before lovers, echoing the same judgment imagery of public humiliation.
Ezekiel 23:25 uses the image of God exposing the nakedness of Oholibah (Jerusalem) as judgment for harlotry—identical to Nahum 3:5's exposure of Nineveh.
Ezekiel 23:29 describes stripping Oholibah naked in hatred, a parallel oracle of shameful exposure for unfaithfulness.
Habakkuk 2:16 says 'let your nakedness be exposed' as Babylon's shame, directly paralleling the same punitive exposure.
Revelation 17:1 depicts the judgment of the great prostitute Babylon, paralleling the harlot city Nineveh facing exposure.
Revelation 3:18 echoes the theme of nakedness as shame but offers white garments to cover it, contrasting judgment with redemption.