Exodus 34:5
And the Lord descended in the cloud, and stood with him there, and proclaimed the name of the Lord.
Cross-reference
Exodus 34:14 reveals that the LORD's name is Jealous — directly connected to the proclamation of His name in verse 5.
Exodus 19:18 describes the Lord's descent in fire and smoke — a parallel manifestation of God's presence here.
In Exodus 33:9, the pillar of cloud descends at the tent entrance as God speaks with Moses—the same theophanic cloud and divine encounter seen here.
Exodus 33:19 promises that God will proclaim His name—this verse fulfills that promise with the actual descent and proclamation.
Exodus 19:11 describes the LORD coming down on Sinai — the same pattern of divine descent seen here when God appears to Moses.
Exodus 23:21 says 'my Name is in him' referring to the angel — a parallel emphasis on the significance of God's name.
1 Kings 8:10-12 describes the cloud filling the temple as God's glorious presence, recalling the same cloud of divine descent here.
Luke 9:35 has a voice from the cloud proclaiming Jesus as the Son, mirroring God proclaiming His name from the cloud here.
Numbers 11:25 directly echoes this: 'the LORD came down in the cloud and spoke with him'—identical language for a parallel event.
Numbers 12:5 describes the LORD coming down in a pillar of cloud — the same mode of divine descent seen here.
Numbers 12:8 explains that God speaks to Moses face to face — the very encounter happening here as God descends.
Isaiah 52:6 promises that God's people will know His name—fulfilling the revelation that began when God proclaimed His name to Moses.
Jeremiah 9:24 highlights knowing that 'I am the LORD'—the very name proclaimed at Sinai becomes the focus of boasting.
John 17:6 states Jesus manifested the Father's name—directly paralleling God proclaiming His name to Moses. Christ fulfills the revelation.
Proverbs 30:4 asks rhetorically what God's name is, pointing to the answer given in the name revealed here.
John 1:18 says no one has seen God, but Jesus makes Him known—a different mode of revelation than the theophany at Sinai.
Deuteronomy 28:58 calls for reverence of the glorious name 'the LORD your God' — the same name proclaimed here.
In 1 Kings 8:42, Solomon prays that foreigners will hear of God's great name, echoing the name proclaimed here.
Psalm 8:1 declares the majesty of God's name throughout the earth, responding to the name revealed here.
Psalm 9:10 says those who know God's name trust in Him, building on the revelation of that name here.
Psalm 20:1 invokes the name of God as protection, a theme rooted in the name proclaimed here.
Luke 9:34 features a cloud that covers the disciples at the Transfiguration—another instance of a divine cloud enveloping a scene.
In Numbers 6:27, the priests put God's name on Israel for blessing — similar emphasis on the significance of God's name.
Deuteronomy 32:3 declares 'I will proclaim the name of the LORD'—an echoed commitment to doing what God Himself did here.