Daniel 4:5
I saw a dream which made me afraid, and the thoughts upon my bed and the visions of my head troubled me.
Cross-reference
In Daniel 4:9, Nebuchadnezzar asks Daniel to interpret this same troubling dream.
Daniel 4:13 continues the dream vision with the watcher descending — expanding on the frightening dream.
In Daniel 4:19, Daniel is alarmed by the dream's interpretation, echoing the king's initial fear.
In Daniel 2:28, Daniel uses the same phrase 'visions of your head' for Nebuchadnezzar's earlier dream, linking the two accounts.
In Daniel 2:29, Daniel mentions 'thoughts on your bed' for Nebuchadnezzar's first dream, identical language to Daniel 4:5.
Daniel 2:3 repeats the exact phrase: 'my spirit is troubled' — Nebuchadnezzar's identical distress over an earlier dream.
In Daniel 7:28, Daniel is greatly alarmed by visions, mirroring Nebuchadnezzar's troubled dream experience.
Daniel 7:15 uses identical phrase 'visions of my head alarmed me' — a direct verbal parallel.
Daniel 5:5 shows Belshazzar's supernatural hand writing — another terrifying divine sign to a Babylonian king, though different reign.
Daniel 7:1 describes Daniel's own dream vision in bed — a parallel prophetic dream experience.
In Job 7:14, Job says God scares him with dreams and terrifies him with visions, exactly paralleling Nebuchadnezzar's fear.