Job 26:14
Lo, these are parts of his ways: but how little a portion is heard of him? but the thunder of his power who can understand?
Cross-reference
Job 11:7-9 asks if you can fathom God's mysteries, echoing Job 26:14's claim that we only hear a whisper of his power.
In Job 40:9, God challenges Job with the same thunder imagery — His power is far beyond human capacity, reinforcing Job's earlier point.
Job 36:26 declares God is great and we do not know Him — directly reinforcing Job's claim that we only hear a whisper of His power.
Job 37:5 says God thunders marvelously and does things we cannot comprehend — a direct echo of Job's 'thunder of His power who can understand?'
In Job 37:23, the same theme of God's unsearchable power and justice is echoed — we cannot find him.
Psalm 139:6 says God's knowledge is too wonderful to attain, paralleling Job 26:14's 'faint whisper' of his works.
Psalm 145:3 declares God's greatness unfathomable, matching Job 26:14's point that we cannot understand his power.
Isaiah 40:28 says God's understanding no one can fathom, directly paralleling Job 26:14's 'thunder of his power'.
Romans 11:33 exclaims God's judgments unsearchable, echoing Job 26:14's theme of incomprehensible divine power.
In 1 Corinthians 13:9-12, Paul echoes this theme of partial knowledge — we now see in a mirror dimly, just as Job says we hear only a whisper of God's power.
Exodus 33:23 shows Moses only seeing God's back — a parallel to Job's 'mere edges of His ways' — both emphasize partial revelation of God.
In Psalm 106:2, the rhetorical question 'who can utter the mighty deeds of the Lord?' mirrors Job's admission of only hearing a whisper.
In Habakkuk 3:4, God's power is veiled — similar to Job's 'outskirts of his ways' and 'small whisper'.
In John 21:25, the vastness of Jesus' deeds exceeds what can be written — parallels Job's sense of only glimpsing God's power.
Psalm 29:3 depicts God's voice thundering over waters — a direct parallel to the 'thunder of His power' that Job says we cannot fully understand.