Revelation 15:4
Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest.
Cross-reference
In Revelation 4:8, the living creatures proclaim 'Holy, holy, holy' continually, directly paralleling the assertion of God's unique holiness here.
Revelation 19:2 celebrates God's true and just judgments, reinforcing the same truth proclaimed in the song of Moses.
Revelation 16:7 echoes the theme of God's righteous judgments, affirming the declaration that His righteous acts are revealed.
In Revelation 11:15, the kingdom becomes Christ's, explaining the basis for all nations worshipping in 15:4.
Revelation 22:9 also commands worship of God alone, echoing the 'you alone are holy' in Rev 15:4.
Revelation 11:13 describes people giving glory to God after judgment, fulfilling the worship theme of Rev 15:4.
Revelation 14:7 explicitly commands to fear God and give glory, matching the song of Rev 15:4.
Revelation 19:10 insists on worshiping God alone, reinforcing the exclusive holiness of God in Rev 15:4.
Revelation 7:11 portrays angels and elders worshiping, mirroring the worship proclaimed in Rev 15:4.
Revelation 4:10 shows elders worshiping God, exemplifying the universal worship foretold in Rev 15:4.
In Revelation 6:10, the martyrs address God as 'holy and true', linking to the holiness and righteous acts mentioned here.
In Exodus 15:14-16, the song of Moses describes nations trembling at God's acts — here that fear transforms into universal worship.
Malachi 1:11 prophesies God's name being great among all nations with offerings, matching 'all nations will come and worship'.
Zechariah 14:16 describes survivors from all nations worshiping the Lord annually, reinforcing the theme of universal homage.
Zechariah 8:20-23 depicts nations flocking to Jerusalem to seek the Lord, directly paralleling the universal worship scene.
Zechariah 2:11 similarly prophesies many nations joining the Lord and becoming His people, echoing the universal worship here.
In Jeremiah 16:19, nations come to the Lord from the ends of the earth, directly anticipating the worship in Revelation 15:4.
Jeremiah 10:7 asks 'Who would not fear you, O King of the nations?' — nearly identical to Revelation's rhetorical question about fearing God.
In Isaiah 66:18-20, God gathers all nations to see His glory, matching the vision of all nations worshipping in Revelation 15:4.
In Isaiah 57:15, God is called 'Holy' and dwells in the high and holy place, reinforcing that He alone is holy.
In Isaiah 45:23, every knee bows to God — a prophecy fulfilled when all nations worship Him in Revelation 15:4.
In Isaiah 6:3, the seraphim declare 'Holy, holy, holy' and the earth full of his glory, directly prefiguring the universal worship of God's holiness here.
Psalm 86:9 says 'All nations shall come and worship before you' — almost word-for-word the prophecy Revelation sees fulfilled.
In 1 Samuel 2:2, Hannah declares 'no one holy like the Lord,' directly mirroring the claim that God alone is holy here.
In Psalm 117:1-2, all nations are called to praise God for His love and faithfulness, echoing the universal worship theme.
In Psalm 22:27, all nations worship the Lord, directly paralleling the future worship in Revelation 15:4.
In Psalm 99:9, the command to worship at his holy mountain because the Lord is holy echoes the reason for universal worship here.
In Psalm 99:5, the call to worship at God's footstool because he is holy matches the worship of all nations because of God's holiness here.
Psalm 46:10 declares God will be exalted among the nations, directly matching 'All nations will come and worship before you' in Revelation.
Isaiah 5:16 directly parallels 'holy God proved holy by righteous acts' — the same logic as Rev 15:4's 'you alone are holy' and 'righteous acts revealed'.
Psalm 67:7 prays that all ends of the earth fear God, echoing the question 'who will not fear?' here.
In Luke 1:49, 'holy is his name' directly parallels 'For you alone are holy'—both celebrate God's holiness and mighty deeds.
Romans 1:21 describes those who 'neither glorified him as God'—a stark contrast to the universal glorification prophesied in Rev 15:4.
Hebrews 12:28 calls for worship with reverence and awe, directly echoing the fear and glorification of God in Rev 15:4.
Psalm 66:4 directly states all the earth worships God, exactly paralleling the nations' worship in Revelation.
Psalm 57:11 calls for God's glory over all the earth, matching the universal worship of all nations in Revelation.
Psalm 72:17 says all nations will call Him blessed, aligning with the prophecy of universal worship.
Psalm 33:8 commands all the earth to fear the Lord, directly parallel to the question 'Who will not fear you?' in Revelation.
1 Chronicles 16:25 declares the LORD worthy of praise and to be feared above all gods, directly paralleling the song's fear and holiness.
Deuteronomy 32:43 calls nations to rejoice with God's people, prefiguring the universal worship in the song.
Exodus 15:11 echoes the rhetorical question about God's incomparable holiness and majesty, matching the song's theme of fearing the holy God.
Zechariah 8:22 prophesies many peoples coming to seek the Lord, directly echoed by all nations worshiping here.
Habakkuk 2:14 predicts the earth filled with the knowledge of God's glory, matching the revelation of righteous acts here.
Isaiah 8:13 pairs regarding God as holy with fearing Him — the exact dual theme of holiness and fear in Rev 15:4.
Isaiah 29:23 describes acknowledging God's holiness and standing in awe — closely matching Rev 15:4's call to fear and honor His holiness.
Micah 4:1 prophesies nations streaming to worship God in the last days, exactly the scene of universal worship here.
Ezekiel 38:23 prophesies God showing His holiness to many nations, directly echoed by the universal worship here.
Psalm 99:3 directly declares God's holiness and calls to praise His name, echoing Revelation 15:4's 'you alone are holy' and global worship.
Isaiah 52:10 proclaims all nations will see God's salvation — directly parallel to 'all nations will come and worship' in Rev 15:4.
Isaiah 66:23 promises all mankind will bow before God — the same universal worship Rev 15:4 declares will happen.
Isaiah 25:3 says strong peoples will glorify and fear God — a specific OT parallel to Revelation's universal worship.
In John 17:11, Jesus addresses God as 'Holy Father'—the same holy name that Rev 15:4 says all nations will glorify.
Romans 15:9 shows Gentiles glorifying God for mercy, fulfilling OT prophecy — a foretaste of all nations worshiping in Revelation.
Psalm 48:11 rejoices in God's judgments, while Revelation mentions His righteous acts revealed—both celebrating divine justice.
Ecclesiastes 3:14 reinforces that God's enduring works prompt fear of Him — the same reverent fear Rev 15:4 calls for.
In Psalm 22:3, God is enthroned as the Holy One and praised by Israel, paralleling the universal worship of God's holiness here.
In Psalm 111:9, God's name is holy and awesome, and he provides redemption—paralleling the holy name and righteous acts revealed here.
Jeremiah 5:22 asks 'Should you not fear me?' grounding that fear in God's power over the sea — echoing the universal fear in Revelation.
In 1 Peter 1:16, the call to be holy because God is holy echoes the assertion that God alone is holy.
In Acts 10:2, Cornelius is described as 'God-fearing'—a Gentile who fears God, foreshadowing the nations' worship in Rev 15:4.
In Luke 11:2, 'hallowed be your name' echoes the call to glorify God's holy name—a prayer that all nations will fulfill.
In Habakkuk 1:12, God is addressed as 'my Holy One' and everlasting, echoing the declaration that He alone is holy.
In Psalm 89:7, God is feared among the holy ones — reinforcing the call to fear and glorify His holy name here.