Deuteronomy 3:24
O Lord God, thou hast begun to shew thy servant thy greatness, and thy mighty hand: for what God is there in heaven or in earth, that can do according to thy works, and according to thy might?
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 11:2 urges considering God's greatness and mighty hand — the same attributes Moses praises here.
Psalm 89:6 asks who can be compared to the Lord — echoing Moses' rhetorical challenge about any god matching Yahweh.
Jeremiah 32:18-21 recalls God's mighty hand and wonders, mirroring Moses' confession of God's incomparable power.
Jeremiah 10:6 directly states 'there is none like unto thee, O LORD' — a clear parallel to Moses' affirmation of God's unique greatness.
In Isaiah 40:25, the same rhetorical question about God's incomparability appears — 'To whom will you liken me?' echoes Moses' declaration that no God can do such works.
Isaiah 40:18 asks 'to whom will you liken God?' — the same theme of incomparability that Moses proclaims in Deuteronomy.
Psalm 145:6 echoes Moses' declaration, using 'might' and 'greatness' to praise God's mighty acts.
Psalm 89:8 asks 'who is like you' for strength and faithfulness — mirroring Moses' emphasis on God's incomparable might.
Exodus 15:11 asks 'Who is like you?' among gods — the same rhetorical question Moses uses to extol God's unique works.
Psalm 86:8 states 'no works like yours' — a near verbatim echo of Moses' question about any god doing works like Yahweh's.
Psalm 71:19 combines 'great things' and 'who is like you' — directly paralleling Moses' praise of God's greatness and unique works.
Psalm 35:10 asks 'who is like you?' in deliverance — a specific application of the incomparability theme from Moses.
2 Samuel 7:22 declares 'there is none like you' — directly reflecting Moses' assertion that no god compares to Yahweh.
1 Chronicles 17:20 has David saying 'there is none like thee, neither is there any God beside thee' — directly parallel to Moses' statement.
1 Kings 8:42 refers to God's 'mighty hand and stretched out arm' — the very terms Moses uses in his prayer for God's greatness.
In 1 Samuel 2:2, Hannah declares 'there is none holy as the LORD... neither is there any rock like our God' — parallel to Moses' confession of God's uniqueness.
1 Corinthians 8:4 affirms 'there is none other God but one' — a New Testament echo of the exclusive monotheism Moses proclaims.
Psalm 106:2 asks who can declare God's mighty deeds — complementing Moses' sense that God's greatness is only begun.
Psalm 145:3 says God's greatness is unsearchable — aligning with Moses' statement that He has only begun to show it.
Daniel 3:29 records Nebuchadnezzar's decree that no other god can deliver like the God of Shadrach — reflecting the same theme of unique divine power.
Nehemiah 9:32 calls God 'great and mighty' — echoing Moses' title for God here.