Habakkuk 3:4
And his brightness was as the light; he had horns coming out of his hand: and there was the hiding of his power.
Cross-reference
Job 26:14 says these are just the fringes of God's ways – like Habakkuk's 'veiled his power', both emphasize God's hidden majesty.
Psalm 104:2 depicts God covering Himself with light—a direct parallel to the brightness and rays from His hand.
Matthew 17:2 shows Christ's face shining like the sun at transfiguration – a NT theophany paralleling Habakkuk's vision of divine brilliance.
Exodus 24:17 describes God's glory as a devouring fire, similar to Habakkuk's brightness – both are theophanic manifestations of divine presence.
Psalm 50:2 depicts God shining forth from Zion, echoing the divine brightness and rays from his hand in Habakkuk.
1 Timothy 6:16 says God dwells in unapproachable light, matching Habakkuk's 'veiled his power' – both stress God's hidden glory.
Revelation 21:23 depicts the New Jerusalem lit by God's glory, reflecting Habakkuk's image of God's brightness as light.
Isaiah 60:19 uses similar imagery: the Lord as everlasting light. Both describe God's brightness replacing created light.
Isaiah 60:20 continues the theme: perpetual divine light without sun or moon, echoing Habakkuk's rays of light from God.
Revelation 22:5 repeats that the Lord God gives light, no need for sun – a future fulfillment of God's radiant presence.
Exodus 13:21 records God leading Israel with pillar of fire—the same divine brightness that is like light here.
Exodus 14:20 describes the cloud that lit up the night—a historical example of the brightness from God's hand.
Psalm 77:18 describes lightning flashing during a theophany, similar to the rays from God's hand in Habakkuk 3:4.