Revelation 15:1
And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvellous, seven angels having the seven last plagues; for in them is filled up the wrath of God.
Cross-reference
Revelation 15:6 describes the seven angels emerging from the sanctuary with the plagues — the same angels introduced here.
In Revelation 15:7, the seven angels receive the bowls of wrath, the plagues introduced in verse 1.
Revelation 15:8 describes the temple filled with smoke while the plagues are completed — an immediate continuation of this same vision.
Revelation 16:1-17 describes the actual pouring of the seven bowls of wrath introduced here.
In Revelation 16:17-21, the seventh bowl brings the end, fulfilling the statement here that God's wrath is finished.
In Revelation 16:19, the seventh bowl fulfills the wrath announced here, with Babylon drinking the cup of fury.
In Revelation 17:1, one of these same seven bowl angels shows the judgment of the prostitute.
Revelation 21:9 mentions one of the seven angels with the seven bowls, directly linking back to this sign.
Revelation 11:18 declares that God's wrath has come — this verse shows the angels bringing the plagues that fulfill that wrath.
In Revelation 11:14, the third woe is announced; here the seven last plagues begin that final woe.
In Revelation 14:10, the wine of God's wrath is threatened; here the seven last plagues pour out that final wrath.
In Revelation 14:19, the winepress of God's wrath is depicted; now the seven last plagues execute that judgment.
In Revelation 19:15, Christ treads the winepress of God's wrath, the same final judgment introduced by the seven plagues here.
Revelation 8:2 also depicts seven angels with judgment instruments (trumpets), paralleling the seven angels with seven plagues here.
Joshua 6:4 has seven priests with seven trumpets bringing down Jericho — a type of divine judgment echoed in these seven angels with plagues.
Daniel 8:19 identifies the vision as the appointed time of the end — the same eschatological setting as these last plagues.