Job 37:2
Hear attentively the noise of his voice, and the sound that goeth out of his mouth.
Cross-reference
Job 37:5 continues the same speech, declaring God thunders wondrously — a direct expansion on the thunder mentioned in verse 2.
Job 36:29 asks who understands the thunderings of God's pavilion — a parallel theme from Elihu's earlier discourse on God's thunder.
In Job 38:1, God answers from the whirlwind—the same stormy voice Elihu describes, now directly spoken by the LORD.
Exodus 19:16-19 depicts God's voice in thunder and lightning at Sinai, echoing the same divine thunderous revelation Elihu describes.
Psalm 104:7 describes waters fleeing at God's thunder—the same powerful voice that Elihu calls attention to in the storm.
2 Samuel 22:14 directly says 'The LORD thundered from heaven'—a clear parallel to the thunderous voice Elihu urges us to hear.
Psalm 29:3 proclaims 'the voice of the LORD is over the waters; the God of glory thunders'—identical imagery to Elihu's thunder.
Isaiah 30:30 describes the LORD's majestic voice with storm and hail—the same divine thunder Elihu calls us to hear.
Jeremiah 10:13 says when God utters his voice, waters tumult—directly paralleling the thunderous voice Elihu describes.
Ezekiel 10:5 explicitly says the cherubim's wings sound 'like the voice of God Almighty when he speaks,' a clear parallel to Job's thunder.
Ezekiel 1:24 compares the cherubim's wings to the 'sound of the Almighty,' directly echoing the thunderous voice imagery in Job.
Jeremiah 51:16 echoes the thunderous voice of God, linking it to cosmic phenomena like waters and lightning, paralleling Job's description.
John 12:29 shows bystanders mistaking God's voice for thunder, illustrating the same phenomenon Job describes as God's thunderous voice.