Psalm 148:8
Fire, and hail; snow, and vapour; stormy wind fulfilling his word:
Cross-references
Psalm 147:15-18 elaborates how snow, hail, and wind obey God's word—directly parallel to the stormy wind fulfilling his word here.
Psalm 107:25-29 describes God commanding a stormy wind and then calming it — the same stormy wind that obeys his word in Psalm 148:8.
In Psalm 135:7, God brings wind from storehouses and makes lightning for rain — the same weather elements listed here as obeying his command.
In Psalm 147:16, God gives snow like wool — the same element (snow) that Psalm 148:8 includes among those fulfilling his command.
Job 38:22-37 details God's storehouses of snow and hail and his control over lightning and rain—underscoring weather obeying him.
Revelation 16:21 features huge hailstones as divine judgment — directly paralleling the hail that fulfills God's word in Psalm 148:8.
In Matthew 8:24-27, Jesus commands the winds and sea, which obey him — the same elements that 'fulfill his command' here, now obeyed by the Word incarnate.
Exodus 9:23-25 describes the plague of hail mixed with fire—the exact combination of elements as God's agents.
Job 37:2-6 describes God commanding snow, rain, thunder, and lightning—echoing the stormy wind fulfilling his word.
Joshua 10:11 tells of hailstones from heaven defeating the Amorites—a direct example of hail as God's weapon.
Exodus 14:21 recounts God driving back the sea with a strong east wind — a powerful act of wind fulfilling his word, echoing Psalm 148:8.
Exodus 10:19 has God using a west wind to remove the locusts — another example of wind obeying God's word, like the stormy wind in Psalm 148:8.
Exodus 10:13 shows God using an east wind to bring locusts — a specific instance of wind fulfilling his command, as in Psalm 148:8.
In Job 37:6, God commands snow to fall on earth — this is the specific divine command that Psalm 148:8 generalizes as elements fulfilling his word.
In Job 37:12, clouds turn by God's guidance to accomplish all he commands — nearly identical language to the stormy wind that 'fulfills his command' here.
Ezekiel 13:13 also uses stormy wind and hail as instruments of God's judgment, showing these elements as agents of His wrath.
Mark 4:39 shows Jesus rebuking the wind, and it obeys Him—a direct parallel to the wind fulfilling God's word.
In Jonah 1:4, God hurls a mighty storm wind as judgment — a specific narrative instance of the stormy wind fulfilling his command described here.
In Job 36:27, God draws up droplets and distills rain — parallel to his command over hail and snow here, both showing his control over precipitation.
In Job 28:26, God made a decree for rain and lightning — the same sovereign ordering of weather elements that 'fulfill his command' in Psalm 148:8.
Romans 1:20 says creation reveals God's power, aligning with the elements here fulfilling His word as evidence of His sovereignty.