Deuteronomy 5:4
The Lord talked with you face to face in the mount out of the midst of the fire,
Cross-reference
Deuteronomy 5:24-26 records the people's fearful response to God speaking face to face, directly expanding on 5:4.
Deuteronomy 5:22 summarizes the same theophany, adding details about the voice and the tablets — directly linked to v.4.
Deuteronomy 4:33 asks rhetorically if any people heard God's voice from fire and lived, emphasizing the uniqueness of this event.
Deuteronomy 4:36 describes God letting Israel hear his voice from heaven and out of the fire, adding purpose of discipline.
Deuteronomy 4:12 describes the same event: God speaking from fire without visible form — reinforcing the unique revelation.
Deuteronomy 10:4 refers to the same event, emphasizing the divine origin of the commandments spoken from fire.
Deuteronomy 34:10 says Moses was known face to face, using the same phrase but for Moses' unique intimacy, not the people's corporate experience.
Exodus 19:9 records God's promise to come in a thick cloud so the people would hear and believe, setting up the event of Deut 5:4.
Exodus 19:18 depicts Sinai wrapped in smoke and fire, the visible manifestation of God's descent mentioned in Deut 5:4.
Exodus 19:19 adds the trumpet sound and God answering Moses in thunder, enriching the auditory scene of Deut 5:4.
Exodus 20:18-22 shows the people's fear and God saying 'I have talked with you from heaven,' connecting to the face-to-face speaking.
Exodus 33:11 says God spoke to Moses face to face as a friend, using the same phrase for a different relationship than the people's experience.
Numbers 12:8 says God spoke to Moses mouth to mouth, clearly, contrasting Moses' direct access with the people's mediated hearing in Deut 5:4.
Nehemiah 9:13 recalls the Sinai event, emphasizing God's direct speech 'from heaven' — a later reflection on the same revelation.
Numbers 14:14 echoes the 'face to face' language, affirming God's direct presence with Israel — a repeated theme from Sinai.