Job 5:9

Which doeth great things and unsearchable; marvellous things without number:

Cross-reference

Job 11:7-9 amplifies the unsearchable nature of God's wisdom — 'higher than heaven, deeper than Sheol'.

Job 26:5-14 expands on God's unsearchable works, describing His power over the underworld and creation, echoing the theme of marvels without number.

Job 37:5 Parallel

Job 37:5 similarly declares God's thunderous works too great for human understanding.

Job 9:10 Parallel

Job 9:10 repeats the exact description of God's great, unsearchable works — reinforcing the same divine attribute.

Job 36:27 Parallel

Job 36:27 gives a specific example of God's great works — the water cycle — illustrating the 'marvelous things' of Job 5:9.

Job 38:28 Parallel

Job 38:28 asks about the father of rain and dew, another specific instance of God's wondrous creative acts from Job 5:9.

Psalm 40:5 Parallel

Psalm 40:5 celebrates God's wondrous deeds beyond counting — matched with Job's 'without number'.

Psalm 72:18 Parallel

Psalm 72:18 echoes the same praise — God alone does wondrous things.

Psalm 86:10 Parallel

Psalm 86:10 affirms God's greatness and wondrous deeds, paralleling Job's declaration.

Romans 11:33 quotes the language of Job — 'unsearchable judgments' — celebrating God's inscrutable wisdom.

Isaiah 40:28 declares God's unsearchable understanding, directly paralleling Job's description.

Revelation 15:3 praises God's great and amazing deeds in the heavenly song, echoing Job's declaration of unsearchable wonders.

Ecclesiastes 11:5 Related theme

Ecclesiastes 11:5 compares ignorance of God's work to the mystery of life, reinforcing the incomprehensible aspect of Job 5:9.

Ecclesiastes 8:17 Related theme

Ecclesiastes 8:17 affirms that God's work cannot be fully discovered, echoing Job's theme of unsearchable divine activity.

Psalm 145:3 Parallel

Psalm 145:3 declares God's greatness unsearchable, using the same term as Job 5:9 to describe his incomprehensible nature.

Psalm 136:4 Parallel

Psalm 136:4 similarly praises God as the one who alone does great wonders, directly paralleling Job's declaration of God's mighty acts.

Psalm 111:2 Parallel

Psalm 111:2 declares 'Great are the works of the Lord,' a direct thematic parallel to Job 5:9's great and marvelous things.

Psalm 106:2 Parallel

Psalm 106:2 asks who can utter God's mighty deeds, complementing Job 5:9's claim that His wonders are unsearchable and without number.

Psalm 104:24 praises the manifold works of God, mirroring Job 5:9's theme of innumerable marvels in creation.

Psalm 71:19 Parallel

Psalm 71:19 declares 'You who have done great things,' directly echoing Job 5:9's phrase about God's great and unsearchable deeds.

Psalm 139:18 echoes the 'without number' motif, referring to God's thoughts — a different but parallel theme of immeasurability.