Job 37:5
God thundereth marvellously with his voice; great things doeth he, which we cannot comprehend.
Cross-reference
Job 37:2 introduces the thunder of God's voice, which this verse then expands upon as marvelous and incomprehensible.
Job 5:9 uses the same phrase 'does great things' and 'unsearchable', directly paralleling the description of God's incomprehensible works here.
Job 9:10 also says God does great things beyond searching out, matching the 'does great things we cannot comprehend' here.
Job 26:14 says we hear only a whisper of God's power and asks who can understand the thunder of his power, directly relating to the wondrous thunder here.
Job 36:26 expands on the theme of God's greatness being unknowable, reinforcing the incomprehensibility of His works.
Job 40:9 asks if Job can thunder with a voice like God, directly referencing the divine thunder from this verse.
Job 11:7 asks if one can find out the deep things of God, echoing the theme of incomprehensible divine actions here.
2 Samuel 22:14 also describes the Lord thundering from heaven, echoing the same divine thunder imagery.
Isaiah 40:28 declares God's understanding unsearchable, directly mirroring the 'cannot comprehend' of this verse.
Romans 11:33 exclaims God's judgments unsearchable and ways past finding out, echoing the incomprehensibility theme.
Revelation 15:3 sings of God's 'great and marvelous works,' using the same language as the 'great things' here.
Ecclesiastes 3:11 echoes that no one can find out God's work from beginning to end, similar to the incomprehensibility here.
Ezekiel 1:24 compares the sound of wings to the voice of the Almighty, evoking the thunderous voice described here.