Jeremiah 10:13
When he uttereth his voice, there is a multitude of waters in the heavens, and he causeth the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth; he maketh lightnings with rain, and bringeth forth the wind out of his treasures.
Cross-reference
Jeremiah 51:16 repeats this verse verbatim in a prophecy against Babylon, showing the same divine power assertion.
Jeremiah 14:22 explicitly states that only God can bring rain — directly reinforcing the same point made here.
Exodus 9:23 describes God sending thunder and lightning as judgment—the same cosmic power Jeremiah 10:13 describes.
Zechariah 10:1 explicitly states the Lord sends thunderstorms and rain—echoing the weather control Jeremiah 10:13 describes.
In Psalm 135:7, nearly identical wording about clouds, lightning, and wind from storehouses directly echoes Jeremiah 10:13.
In Psalm 29:3-10, the Lord's voice over waters and lightning mirrors the storm imagery in Jeremiah's declaration of God's power.
In Job 38:35, God challenges Job's control over lightning, echoing Jeremiah's assertion that God sends lightning from His storehouses.
Job 38:25-27 depicts God channeling rain to water the desert—the same sovereign provision Jeremiah 10:13 attributes to His storehouses.
Job 37:2-5 expands on the same theme — God's thunderous voice and the wonder of His power over the elements.
In Job 36:27-33, God's control over rain, lightning, and thunder is elaborately described, directly paralleling Jeremiah's depiction.
In 1 Kings 18:45, the sky darkens with clouds, wind rises, and rain falls — exactly the weather phenomena Jeremiah attributes to God.
1 Samuel 12:18 shows God sending thunder and rain in answer to prayer—the same power over nature Jeremiah 10:13 ascribes to Him.
In 1 Samuel 12:17, Samuel calls for thunder and rain as a sign—illustrating the divine weather control Jeremiah 10:13 celebrates.
Job 26:8 describes God binding waters in clouds, directly paralleling the imagery of mist and storehouses here.
Psalm 104:13 depicts God watering mountains from heaven, a parallel description of rain provision.
1 Kings 18:1 records God's promise to send rain—the same rain-giving power Jeremiah 10:13 attributes to His storehouses.
Psalm 135:17 highlights idols' inability to hear or speak—contrasting the living God who controls nature in Jeremiah 10:13.
Job 38:28 rhetorically asks who 'fathers' rain, affirming God as the source — same idea as here.
In Psalm 18:13, thunder is the Lord's voice in deliverance, paralleling the thunder that roars in the heavens in Jeremiah.
In Psalm 68:33, God thunders from the ancient skies, matching Jeremiah's depiction of thunder roaring in the heavens.
In Psalm 147:8, God covers the sky with clouds and prepares rain — similar to Jeremiah's description of God making clouds rise.
Amos 4:13 echoes God's power over creation—forming mountains and wind—similar to the storm imagery in this verse.
Genesis 1:6 shows God establishing the waters above—the source of the rain and clouds Jeremiah 10:13 attributes to His power.
Job 37:16 speaks of God balancing clouds, reinforcing the theme of God's wisdom in weather.
Job 5:10 similarly attributes rain to God's provision, echoing the theme of divine control over water.