Deuteronomy 4:12
And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire: ye heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a voice.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 4:15 directly applies the fact that 'you saw no form' as a warning against idolatry.
Deuteronomy 4:33 highlights the uniqueness of hearing God's voice from the fire — same event.
Deuteronomy 4:36 reiterates that Israel heard God's words from the fire — a parallel description.
Deuteronomy 5:4 describes the same event as 'face to face' — emphasizing direct speech, while 4:12 notes no form was seen.
Deuteronomy 5:22 adds that God spoke the Ten Commandments from the fire — same event with specific content.
In Matthew 17:5, a voice from the cloud declares Jesus — mirroring the divine voice from fire at Sinai with no visible form.
In Matthew 3:17, God speaks from heaven with a voice — echoing Sinai where they heard a voice without seeing a form.
In John 12:28-30, a voice from heaven speaks, mistaken for thunder — reminiscent of the audible divine voice at Sinai without visible form.
Colossians 1:15 presents Christ as the image of the invisible God — fulfilling the OT truth of God's invisibility.
1 Kings 19:12 contrasts: God was not in the fire for Elijah, unlike at Sinai where He spoke from fire.
In 2 Peter 1:17, Peter recalls the divine voice at the Transfiguration — paralleling the voice from fire at Sinai.
Numbers 12:8 contrasts Moses, who saw the form of the Lord, with the people who saw no form at Sinai.
Exodus 20:22 records God speaking from heaven at Sinai — the same foundational event.
In 2 Peter 1:18, Peter emphasizes hearing that voice — directly echoing the Sinai experience of hearing God speak without a visible form.
In Hebrews 12:19, the terrifying voice at Sinai is the same theophany where God declared the covenant and Ten Commandments.
John 5:37 claims the Jews have neither heard God's voice nor seen His form — contrasting with the Sinai experience where they did hear His voice.
Exodus 19:18 describes the fire and smoke on Sinai when God descended — the exact theophany spoken of here.
John 1:18 states that no one has seen God — directly reflecting the truth in this verse that the people saw no form, only heard His voice.
In Exodus 19:9, God promises to come in a thick cloud so the people hear His voice — the same auditory revelation recalled here.
Psalm 147:19 declares that God reveals His word and statutes to Israel — the same giving of the law that occurred when He spoke from fire here.
Ezekiel 10:5 compares the sound of cherubim wings to the voice of God, echoing the powerful voice heard at Sinai in this verse.
Ezekiel 1:4 describes a fiery theophany with a cloud and fire — reminiscent of Sinai's fire, though Ezekiel sees a form, unlike the no-form here.
Isaiah 40:18 echoes the principle that God has no visible likeness — a theme from the Sinai revelation.
Judges 5:5 poetically recalls Sinai's theophany, where God's presence made mountains melt — echoing the fire and voice here.