Psalm 68:33
To him that rideth upon the heavens of heavens, which were of old; lo, he doth send out his voice, and that a mighty voice.
Cross-reference
Psalm 68:4 uses the same 'rides upon the heavens' imagery, reinforcing God's majestic travel.
Psalm 18:10 depicts God riding on a cherub, a similar image of divine movement through the skies.
Psalm 29:3-9 expands on God's mighty voice, describing it as thunder over waters, breaking cedars—a direct parallel to the 'mighty voice' here.
Psalm 104:3 describes God making clouds his chariot, paralleling the riding-on-heavens imagery.
Psalm 77:17 depicts God's voice as thunder from the skies, reinforcing the image of His powerful voice from the heavens.
Psalm 77:18 continues the storm imagery with thunder and lightning, echoing the 'mighty voice' as God's thunderous presence.
Psalm 93:2 affirms God's throne established from of old, echoing the 'ancient heavens' in this verse.
Psalm 102:25 echoes the theme of God's sovereignty over the heavens, linking His ancient work of creation to the 'ancient heavens' He rides.
In Job 37:4, God's thunderous voice is described, directly paralleling the 'mighty voice' of the rider in the heavens.
In Jeremiah 51:16, the same thunder imagery as 10:13 appears, reinforcing God's control over creation.
In Jeremiah 10:13, God's thunder makes the waters roar, directly echoing the thunderous voice of the rider.
In Isaiah 19:1, the Lord rides on a swift cloud to judge Egypt, mirroring the rider of the highest heavens.
In Deuteronomy 33:26, the identical phrase 'rides across the heavens' appears, linking God's help for Israel to his heavenly journey.
Ezekiel 10:5 compares the sound of cherubim wings to 'the voice of God Almighty when he speaks,' paralleling the mighty voice from heaven.
John 12:28 records a voice from heaven answering Jesus, showing God sending His voice—a direct parallel to the 'sends out his voice' here.
John 12:29 shows the crowd interpreting the heavenly voice as thunder, linking to the 'mighty voice' that sounds like thunder.
In Ezekiel 1:24, the voice of the Almighty is compared to rushing waters, similar to the thunderous voice of the rider.
Revelation 11:19 includes peals of thunder as part of God's temple theophany, connecting to the 'mighty voice' as thunderous divine speech.