Habakkuk 1:5
Behold ye among the heathen, and regard, and wonder marvellously: for I will work a work in your days, which ye will not believe, though it be told you.
Cross-reference
Habakkuk 3:2 is the prophet's prayerful response, pleading for revival and mercy regarding the terrifying work announced here.
Habakkuk 3:16 shows the prophet's trembling and resolve after hearing the same revelation — a direct emotional reaction.
Jeremiah 25:14-29 expands on God's work through Babylon: many nations serve Babylon, then Babylon is punished—directly developing the 'work' Habakkuk announces.
Acts 13:41 quotes the phrase 'you would not believe if told' from this verse, applying it to those who reject the gospel.
1 Samuel 3:11 uses the same formula — God announces a shocking deed that will make ears tingle — a direct parallel to Habakkuk's 'work in your days'.
2 Chronicles 36:6 records the historical Babylonian invasion — the very event Habakkuk 1:5 prophesied as unbelievable.
Jeremiah 5:15 similarly prophesies a distant nation as God's instrument — directly parallel to the unbelievable work in Habakkuk.
Lamentations 4:12 describes the same disbelief that enemies could enter Jerusalem — echoing this verse's 'you would not believe if told.'
Ezekiel 12:22-28 similarly warns against doubting God's imminent action — a parallel to Habakkuk's announcement of an unbelievable work.
Ezekiel 12:25 declares God's word will be performed without delay — the same imminent 'work in your days' as here.
Isaiah 28:21 describes God doing his 'strange work' and 'alien deed' of judgment — a parallel to the astonishing work announced here.
Isaiah 29:14 also speaks of God doing a 'marvelous work' that astonishes, using the same Hebrew root word for 'wonder' as here.