Ezekiel 10:5
And the sound of the cherubims’ wings was heard even to the outer court, as the voice of the Almighty God when he speaketh.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 1:24 describes the same sound of wings like the voice of the Almighty, reinforcing the cherubim's identity.
Ezekiel 3:13 also records the sound of the cherubim's wings; here that sound is compared specifically to God's voice. A direct parallel from the same vision.
Psalm 29:3-9 repeatedly extols the powerful voice of the Lord thundering—matching the comparison of cherubim's sound to God's voice.
Psalm 68:33 says God sends out a mighty voice—parallel to the 'voice of God Almighty' attributed to the cherubim's wings.
John 12:29 records the crowd misinterpreting God's voice as thunder—directly linking thunder to divine speech, as in Ezekiel's 'voice of God Almighty'.
In 2 Samuel 22:14, the Lord thunders from heaven—a direct parallel to the sound of God Almighty in Ezekiel's vision.
Psalm 18:13 says the Lord thundered and uttered his voice—direct parallel to the voice of God Almighty in Ezekiel.
Psalm 29:4 declares the voice of the LORD is powerful—a direct parallel to the sound like God Almighty speaking.
John 12:28 records the Father speaking audibly from heaven—the actual voice of God, parallel to the comparison in Ezekiel.
Isaiah 30:30 describes God's majestic voice in judgment; here the cherubim's wings sound like that same powerful voice. Both emphasize God's audible power.
Hebrews 12:19 describes the terrifying voice of God at Sinai, echoing the overwhelming sound of God's presence like in Ezekiel's vision.
In Revelation 10:3, a mighty angel cries out like a lion, paralleling the voice of God Almighty heard in Ezekiel's cherubim sound.