Exodus 8:10
And he said, To morrow. And he said, Be it according to thy word: that thou mayest know that there is none like unto the Lord our God.
Cross-reference
Exodus 8:22 repeats the 'that you may know' formula for the flies plague, reinforcing the lesson that God is unique.
Exodus 9:14 echoes the same purpose phrase: 'so that you may know that there is no one like me'—directly reinforcing the theme of God's uniqueness.
Exodus 15:11 celebrates 'Who is like you, O LORD?'—answering the earlier claim that there is no one like the LORD.
Exodus 7:5 states the same purpose — that Egypt will know the LORD — but in the context of the exodus itself, while here it's tied to the frog plague.
Deuteronomy 32:31 declares 'their rock is not like our Rock'—a later echo of the 'no one like the LORD' theme from the plague narrative.
Deuteronomy 33:26 says 'There is none like God'—directly paralleling the uniqueness of God proclaimed in the frog plague.
In 2 Samuel 7:22, David echoes the same declaration — there is none like God, and no God besides Him.
In 1 Chronicles 17:20, David repeats the identical affirmation: 'O LORD, there is none like you, and there is no God besides you.'
In Psalm 83:18, the psalmist prays that all may know the LORD alone is Most High — directly paralleling the recognition of God's uniqueness.
In Psalm 86:8, the psalmist declares 'There is none like you among the gods' — directly echoing the incomparability of God.
In Psalm 89:6-8, the psalmist asks who in heaven can compare to the LORD — reinforcing the same theme of God's uniqueness.
In Isaiah 40:25, God asks 'To whom will you compare me?' — the same rhetorical assertion of His incomparable nature.
In Isaiah 46:9, God declares 'I am God, and there is no one like me' — a direct parallel to the claim in Exodus 8:10.
In Jeremiah 10:6, the prophet says 'There is none like you, O LORD' — directly mirroring the declaration from Exodus.
Isaiah 40:18 asks who can compare to God, directly echoing the 'none like the LORD' theme from the plagues.