Job 36:29
Also can any understand the spreadings of the clouds, or the noise of his tabernacle?
Cross-references
Job 36:33 continues the thunder theme, stating that God's thunder announces the storm, directly following the question about understanding thunder.
In Job 37:2-5, Elihu expands on the thunder and God's majestic voice, directly continuing the same storm imagery.
Job 37:16 continues Elihu's challenge about understanding clouds — a direct parallel to the same question.
Job 38:37 asks who can number the clouds — a direct parallel to the mystery of clouds here.
Job 26:8 describes God wrapping waters in clouds, directly relating to the spreading of clouds in Job 36:29.
Job 35:5 calls attention to the clouds, setting up the discussion of God's thunder in the clouds in Job 36:29.
Job 38:9 describes God making clouds a garment for the sea — another aspect of God's control over clouds.
Psalm 29:3-10 celebrates the voice of the Lord over waters and thunder, paralleling the thunder from God's canopy in Job.
Psalm 18:13 depicts God thundering from heaven, echoing the same divine storm imagery as Job's description of thunder from God's canopy.
Psalm 77:16-19 describes God's thunder and lightning in the storm, similar to the thunder from God's canopy in Job.
Psalm 104:3 depicts God making clouds his chariot — a poetic image of divine sovereignty over clouds.
1 Kings 18:44 shows a small cloud rising — a specific narrative example of cloud formation leading to rain.
1 Kings 18:45 describes the sky growing black with clouds and great rain — a narrative fulfillment of the cloud spreading.
Psalm 104:7 mentions God's thunder causing waters to flee, connecting to the thunder from God's canopy in Job.
Nahum 1:3 describes God's way in whirlwind and storm with clouds as dust, echoing the clouds and thunder from God's canopy.