Psalm 114:3
The sea saw it, and fled: Jordan was driven back.
Cross-reference
Psalm 106:9 recounts God rebuking the Red Sea to dry it — the same Exodus event described poetically here.
Psalm 104:7 also says waters fled at God's rebuke — a direct parallel to the sea fleeing here.
Psalm 77:16 similarly depicts waters trembling at God's presence — reinforcing the sea's fearful reaction to the Lord.
Psalm 74:15 recalls God breaking open fountains and drying up streams, paralleling the same divine control over waters.
Exodus 15:8 describes waters piling up at God's breath — another poetic depiction of the same Exodus miracle.
Habakkuk 3:15 portrays God trampling the sea — a similar image of God's victory over the waters.
Habakkuk 3:8 asks about God's wrath against rivers and sea — echoing the divine power over waters seen here.
Isaiah 63:12 recalls God dividing waters for Israel — the same event referenced here.
Joshua 3:13-16 narrates the Jordan stopping when priests step in — the very event poetically summarized as 'the Jordan turned back'.
Exodus 14:21 is the historical account of the sea being driven back — the event this verse poetically summarizes.
Nehemiah 9:11 explicitly recounts the Red Sea dividing for Israel to cross on dry land — the event behind 'the sea looked and fled'.
Isaiah 43:16 directly references God making a path through the sea, the same miracle as here.
Joshua 3:16 gives the detailed geography of the Jordan's waters piling up at Adam, specifying the miracle behind 'the Jordan turned back'.
Nahum 1:4 explicitly says God rebukes the sea and dries it up, directly paralleling the sea's flight.
1 Corinthians 10:1 directly references the Exodus crossing, the same event depicted in Psalm 114:3.
Isaiah 50:2 speaks of God drying up the sea by rebuke, similar to the sea's flight at His presence.
Zechariah 10:11 echoes the sea fleeing imagery, applying it to future deliverance from distress.
2 Samuel 22:16 describes the sea's channels being exposed at God's rebuke, a similar poetic image of God's power over waters.
Habakkuk 3:10 shows waters and the deep reacting to God's presence, similar to the sea fleeing here.