Psalm 18:10
And he rode upon a cherub, and did fly: yea, he did fly upon the wings of the wind.
Cross-reference
Psalm 104:3 says God 'rides on the wings of the wind,' directly echoing the same phrase from Psalm 18:10.
Psalm 99:1 depicts God enthroned between cherubim, reinforcing the cherubim as divine attendants seen in Psalm 18:10.
Psalm 68:33 again describes God 'rideth upon the heavens' — reinforcing the same rider imagery as Psalm 18:10.
Psalm 68:4 calls God 'him that rideth upon the heavens' — a direct parallel to riding on a cherub, both depicting God as a divine rider.
Psalm 68:17 mentions God's chariots and angels — a broader image of divine transport, related to the cherub-riding but less specific.
2 Samuel 22:11 is a near-verbatim parallel of Psalm 18:10, part of the same song recorded in Samuel.
2 Samuel 22:12 continues the theophany description from the parallel account, adding darkness and clouds around God.
Job 30:22 says God makes Job 'ride upon the wind' — the same imagery of being borne on the wind, though here it's destructive.
1 Chronicles 28:18 describes the cherubim as a 'chariot' — the same beings God rides in Psalm 18:10, linking the ark's cherubim to divine movement.
Deuteronomy 33:26 describes God riding through the heavens, paralleling the riding imagery of Psalm 18:10.
Isaiah 19:1 says the LORD 'rideth upon a swift cloud' — the same concept of God riding on a cloud/wind, directly echoing Psalm 18:10.
Ezekiel 1:5-14 describes the living creatures (cherubim) as God's chariot, expanding on the cherub-riding imagery of Psalm 18:10.
Ezekiel 10:1 shows cherubim with a throne above them, echoing the cherub-riding imagery of God's presence here.
Ezekiel 10:20-22 identifies the living creatures as cherubim, linking back to the same cherubim imagery in Psalm 18:10.
Habakkuk 3:8 depicts God riding horses/chariots, similar to riding cherub and wind—both divine warrior imagery.
Ezekiel 10:18 describes God's glory departing over cherubim, paralleling the cherub-riding theophany.
Isaiah 6:2 shows seraphim flying with wings — similar winged heavenly beings, but here they serve God rather than being ridden.