Job 9:10
Which doeth great things past finding out; yea, and wonders without number.
Cross-references
Job 5:9 uses nearly identical wording — 'great and unsearchable things, wonders without number' — directly echoing the description of God's incomprehensible works.
In Job 37:5, Elihu says God does great things we cannot comprehend, directly echoing Job 9:10's theme of unfathomable works.
Job 26:12-14 illustrates God's power over chaos as just 'the fringes of His ways', reinforcing the theme of His unfathomable works in Job 9:10.
Job 37:23 declares 'the Almighty—we cannot find Him; He is exalted in power', echoing the unsearchable nature of God's works in Job 9:10.
Isaiah 40:26-28 describes God's inscrutable understanding and creative power, strongly echoing Job 9:10's 'great things unfathomable' and 'wonders without number'.
In Daniel 4:3, God's signs and wonders are declared great and mighty, closely paralleling Job's 'marvelous things beyond number'.
In Romans 11:33, Paul echoes Job's theme of God's unsearchable judgments and ways, deepening the awe of divine incomprehensibility.
In Psalm 40:5, God's wondrous deeds are multiplied and beyond telling, matching Job's 'marvelous things beyond number'.
In Psalm 145:3, God's greatness is declared unsearchable, directly paralleling Job's 'beyond searching out'.
Ecclesiastes 3:11 states that man cannot fathom God's work from beginning to end, reinforcing the theme of incomprehensibility in Job 9:10.
Psalm 71:15 says 'I do not know the sum of them' regarding God's righteousness, paralleling Job 9:10's 'wonders without number' — both acknowledge countless divine acts.
Psalm 72:18 praises God 'who alone works wonders', aligning with Job 9:10's attribution of countless wonders to God alone.
In Ephesians 3:20, God's ability to do far more than we ask or think parallels Job's 'beyond searching out' and 'marvelous things beyond number'.
In Exodus 15:11, God's majestic wonders are celebrated, reinforcing Job's declaration of His marvelous works beyond number.
In Psalm 136:4, God alone does great wonders, mirroring Job's emphasis on His incomparable and innumerable acts.
In Daniel 4:2, Nebuchadnezzar recounts God's signs and wonders, aligning with Job's testimony of marvelous deeds beyond number.