Daniel 4:3
How great are his signs! and how mighty are his wonders! his kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and his dominion is from generation to generation.
Cross-reference
In Daniel 7:14, the Son of Man receives everlasting dominion — showing the ultimate embodiment of the eternal kingdom celebrated here.
Daniel 6:27 repeats the language of signs and wonders — God's deliverance of Daniel confirms the king's earlier praise.
In Daniel 6:26, Darius declares God's kingdom shall never be destroyed — a nearly identical confession to Nebuchadnezzar's here.
In Daniel 2:44, God's kingdom is a stone crushing all others and standing forever — reinforcing the eternal dominion praised here.
In Daniel 7:27, the saints receive an everlasting kingdom — expanding the promise of eternal dominion to God's people.
Daniel 2:37 earlier acknowledged God gave Nebuchadnezzar dominion; now in Daniel 4:3 he praises God's eternal kingdom.
In Isaiah 9:7, the Messiah's government and peace have no end — a prophetic parallel to the eternal kingdom praised here.
In Luke 1:32, Jesus is promised the throne of David forever — paralleling the everlasting dominion theme of this verse.
Isaiah 25:1 praises God for 'wonderful things' — a direct thematic match to Daniel's declaration of mighty wonders.
In Psalm 145:13, 'Your kingdom is an everlasting kingdom' — a nearly verbatim echo of the praise here.
In Luke 1:33, Jesus' kingdom will have no end — directly continuing the eternal reign proclaimed here.
In 1 Timothy 1:17, this same praise of God as eternal, immortal King echoes Nebuchadnezzar's confession of God's everlasting dominion.
In Hebrews 1:8, this eternal throne language is applied to Christ, showing His divine kingship matches the everlasting kingdom declared here.
Psalm 86:10 echoes 'great and do wondrous things' — directly paralleling Daniel's praise of God's signs and wonders.
In Revelation 11:15, the proclamation that God's kingdom has come and will reign forever directly echoes this verse's theme of everlasting dominion.
Revelation 15:3 sings 'Great and marvelous are your deeds' and 'King of the nations', directly echoing Daniel 4:3's praise of God's everlasting kingdom.
In Exodus 15:18, the declaration 'The Lord reigns forever' is the OT foundation for this verse's confession of God's eternal kingdom.
In 1 Chronicles 29:11, David's prayer ascribes eternal kingdom and power to God—directly parallel to Nebuchadnezzar's praise.
Psalm 105:27 describes signs and wonders in Egypt — a historical example of the mighty wonders Daniel 4:3 proclaims.
Revelation 15:1 mentions 'great and marvelous' signs, using the same language as Daniel 4:3's 'great signs and mighty wonders'.
Deuteronomy 4:34 recounts God's signs and wonders in the Exodus — the same mighty works that Nebuchadnezzar acknowledges.
Ezekiel 36:23 shows God making His name known among nations, paralleling Nebuchadnezzar's public praise of God's wonders.
Jeremiah 10:6 proclaims God's unmatched greatness and power, reinforcing the theme of God's everlasting dominion.
Psalm 111:2 extols the greatness of God's works, mirroring the declaration of God's great signs and wonders.
Acts 2:11 has people declaring God's wonders in tongues, similar to Nebuchadnezzar proclaiming God's mighty wonders.
In Psalm 107:8, the same call to give thanks for God's wonderful deeds echoes Nebuchadnezzar's praise of God's mighty wonders.