Deuteronomy 4:39
Know therefore this day, and consider it in thine heart, that the Lord he is God in heaven above, and upon the earth beneath: there is none else.
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 4:35 states the same truth: 'the Lord is God; there is no other' — reinforcing the declaration here.
Joshua 2:11 records Rahab's confession using the same phrase — affirming the truth declared here.
In 1 Chronicles 28:9, David exhorts Solomon to know God and serve Him wholeheartedly — same imperative to acknowledge the Lord as here.
2 Chronicles 20:6 echoes this same declaration of God's sovereignty in heaven and over all kingdoms, reinforcing that none can withstand Him.
Psalm 115:3 affirms God's absolute freedom in heaven, doing as He pleases—a parallel expression of His sole deity.
Psalm 135:6 extends God's sovereign pleasure to heaven, earth, and seas—another affirmation of His exclusive rule.
Daniel 4:35 declares God's unchallenged will in heaven and among earth's inhabitants, echoing the sole sovereignty here.
1 Kings 8:60 directly quotes the same confession that the LORD is God and there is none else, for global testimony.
1 Chronicles 17:20 proclaims no God like or beside the LORD, reinforcing the exclusive deity declared here.
2 Chronicles 6:14 explicitly states there is no God like Him in heaven or earth, matching the dual realm affirmation.
1 Corinthians 8:4 applies the same exclusive monotheism to the issue of idol food: 'there is none other God but one.'
In Mark 12:32, the scribe affirms the same truth: 'there is one God; and there is none other but he' — echoing Deuteronomy's monotheism.
Isaiah 44:6 declares the LORD as first and last, with no God beside Him—a direct echo of the 'none else' claim.
Isaiah 44:8 rhetorically asks if there is any God besides the LORD, answering no—reinforcing the exclusive deity.
Isaiah 45:5 repeats the same exclusive claim: 'I am the LORD, and there is none else' — reinforcing Deuteronomy's core monotheistic statement.
Colossians 1:16 shows Christ as the agent of creation, expanding Deuteronomy's monotheistic claim to include the Son.
Hosea 7:2 rebukes Israel for not considering God's omniscience — directly opposing the call to acknowledge God here.
Isaiah 5:12 condemns those who disregard God's deeds — opposite of the recognition demanded here.
Isaiah 1:3 laments that Israel does not know God, failing to live out the command to know Him given here.
1 Chronicles 29:11 praises God's sovereignty over heaven and earth — echoing the universal lordship proclaimed here.