2 Samuel 22:14
The Lord thundered from heaven, and the most High uttered his voice.
Cross-reference
1 Samuel 2:10 declares 'The LORD will thunder from heaven' — the same image of God's powerful voice in judgment.
1 Samuel 7:10 recounts God thundering against the Philistines, a direct historical parallel of divine deliverance through thunder.
1 Samuel 12:18 reports that the LORD sent thunder that day, a direct fulfillment of Samuel's call and a parallel to God thundering from heaven.
Job 37:2-5 describes God's voice in thunder as 'the sound of his roar', closely mirroring the thunderous utterance here.
Psalm 29:3-9 is a full hymn about 'the voice of the LORD' thundering over waters, a powerful thematic parallel to God's thunderous voice.
Psalm 77:16-19 recalls God's thunder in the whirlwind at the Red Sea, a historical theophany parallel to divine thunder from heaven.
Isaiah 30:30 speaks of 'the LORD's majestic voice' in judgment, using thunder imagery similar to the thunder from heaven here.
In Revelation 11:19, thunder and lightning from heaven echo the same theophany where God's voice thunders from heaven.
In Job 37:5, God thunders wondrously with his voice — directly mirroring the thunder and voice in this verse.
In Psalm 77:18, thunder and lightning accompany God's voice — a strong parallel to this thunder from heaven.
In Isaiah 29:6, the LORD visits with thunder — same imagery of God's voice thundering in judgment.
1 Samuel 12:17 has Samuel calling for thunder as a sign of judgment, echoing God's voice from heaven in a different context.
Job 40:9 asks 'Can you thunder with a voice like his?' — a rhetorical use of the same divine thunder metaphor.
In Joel 2:11, the LORD utters his voice before his army — a thematic parallel to God thundering from heaven.
Ezekiel 10:5 compares the cherubim's wing sound to 'the voice of God Almighty' — an echo of God's thunderous voice.