Revelation 16:21
And there fell upon men a great hail out of heaven, every stone about the weight of a talent: and men blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail; for the plague thereof was exceeding great.
Cross-reference
In Revelation 16:9, men cursed God after the heat plague, matching the blasphemy here after the hail plague.
Exodus 9:23-26 records the plague of hail on Egypt, a type of the final plague of hail in Revelation.
Joshua 10:11 describes God throwing hailstones to defeat Israel's enemies, similar to this judgment.
Isaiah 30:30 includes hailstones in God's judgment on Assyria, paralleling this eschatological hail.
Ezekiel 13:13 intensifies the warning with great hailstones in wrath to make a full end, directly paralleling Revelation's plague.
Ezekiel 38:22 explicitly mentions God raining hailstones on Gog, directly connecting to this eschatological hail.
Exodus 9:22 introduces the Egyptian plague of hail, which this final plague echoes as a divine judgment.
Job 38:23 mentions hail reserved for God's day of battle — this plague uses hail as a weapon of judgment.
Psalm 105:32 recalls the Egyptian hail plague — this final hail plague mirrors that earlier judgment.
Isaiah 28:17 uses hail as a metaphor for sweeping away lies — here hail brings literal judgment, fulfilling that imagery.
Ezekiel 13:11 warns of great hailstones falling as judgment on false prophets, echoing this plague.
Psalm 18:12 depicts God's coming with hailstones — here hailstones are used as a plague, showing divine power.
Psalm 148:8 lists hail as fulfilling God's word — here hail obeys God as a tool of judgment.
Isaiah 8:21 describes people cursing God in distress, paralleling the blasphemy here after the hail plague.
In Zechariah 14:12, a plague causes flesh to rot—parallel divine judgment affliction to the hailstorm here.