Psalm 104:7
At thy rebuke they fled; at the voice of thy thunder they hasted away.
Cross-references
Psalm 114:3-7 describes the sea fleeing at God's presence — the same imagery of waters fleeing before the Lord as in Psalm 104:7.
Psalm 18:13 describes the Lord thundering from heaven, a direct parallel to the thunder that makes waters flee.
Psalm 76:6 uses the same phrase 'at your rebuke' to describe God's power over enemies, mirroring the rebuke that drives back waters.
Genesis 8:1 describes God making the floodwaters subside — mirroring the rebuke that made the waters flee here.
Mark 4:39 shows Jesus rebuking the sea — the same divine action as God's rebuke that made the waters flee here.
Job 37:2 calls attention to the roar of God's voice, directly paralleling the 'sound of your thunder' in the main verse.
Nahum 1:4 uses 'rebukes the sea' — the same divine rebuke that in the main verse makes waters flee.
Job 12:15 describes God's absolute control over waters — holding back or releasing — consistent with the rebuke that makes them flee here.
Proverbs 8:28 describes God establishing the fountains of the deep — part of the same creation event where waters were rebuked.
Jeremiah 51:16 shows God's thunder making waters roar, while the main verse has waters fleeing — both depict thunder's power over waters.