Psalm 68:34
Ascribe ye strength unto God: his excellency is over Israel, and his strength is in the clouds.
Cross-references
Psalm 29:1 uses the same 'ascribe' verb, calling heavenly beings to ascribe glory and strength to God — directly parallel to ascribing power.
Psalm 29:2 continues the call to ascribe glory and worship in holiness — same theme of ascribing honor to God.
Psalm 96:6-8 echoes the exact phrasing: 'ascribe to the LORD glory and strength' — a parallel call to worship.
Psalm 62:11 states 'power belongs to God' — a direct affirmation of what Psalm 68:34 calls to ascribe.
Deuteronomy 33:26 describes God riding the skies in majesty — directly parallel to 'majesty over Israel' and 'power in the skies'.
1 Chronicles 16:28 is nearly identical: 'ascribe to the LORD glory and strength' — a direct parallel.
1 Chronicles 16:29 continues with ascribing glory due his name and worship — same liturgical call.
1 Chronicles 29:12 acknowledges that power and might belong to God — a thematic parallel to ascribing power.
Revelation 4:11 directly echoes 'ascribe power to God' from Psalm 68:34, declaring God worthy of glory and power.
Isaiah 19:1 depicts God riding on a cloud, echoing the 'power in the skies' from Psalm 68:34. Both use sky imagery for divine majesty.