Job 9:5
Which removeth the mountains, and they know not: which overturneth them in his anger.
Cross-reference
Job 28:9 describes humans overturning mountains by labor, in contrast to God's effortless, angry overturning.
Psalm 114:6 poetically depicts mountains skipping like rams at God's presence, paralleling Job's mountain-moving.
Habakkuk 3:6 says ancient mountains crumble and hills collapse, vividly matching Job's overturning mountains.
Zechariah 14:4 prophesies the Mount of Olives splitting in two — directly parallels God moving mountains in Job 9:5.
Matthew 21:21 applies mountain-moving to faith, echoing Job's depiction of God's power but shifting to human faith.
1 Corinthians 13:2 alludes to faith that moves mountains, directly referencing the same powerful imagery.
Revelation 6:14 depicts every mountain removed at the end, an eschatological fulfillment of mountain-moving power.
Revelation 16:18-20 describes a massive earthquake where mountains vanish — directly echoes Job 9:5's 'He removes the mountains'.
Psalm 46:2 echoes the same image of mountains falling, but adds assurance: we will not fear even when mountains are moved.
Psalm 68:8 describes Mount Sinai shaking at God's presence, echoing Job's theme of mountains moved by divine power.
Isaiah 40:12 shows God weighing mountains in scales, another aspect of His sovereignty over them.
Habakkuk 3:10 has mountains writhing at God's sight, a parallel image of God's power over them.
Zechariah 4:7 uses the metaphor of a great mountain becoming a plain, echoing the idea of mountains removed by God.