1 Chronicles 16:12
Remember his marvellous works that he hath done, his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth;
Cross-reference
In 1 Chronicles 16:8, the call to give thanks and make known his deeds is the praise response to remembering his wonders in the main verse.
In 1 Chronicles 16:9, the command to sing and tell of his wondrous works directly continues the call to remember them.
1 Chronicles 16:14 continues the same psalm, declaring God's judgments in all the earth — an immediate expansion of the 'judgments of his mouth' mentioned here.
Psalm 103:2 echoes the same call to remember God's benefits — both passages urge not forgetting what He has done.
In Psalm 111:4, God causes His wondrous works to be remembered — directly matching the theme of recalling His wonders here.
Psalm 119:13 declares all the rules of God's mouth — directly parallel to 'judgments of his mouth' in the main verse.
Exodus 13:3 also calls to remember God's deliverance from Egypt, directly mirroring the command to remember His marvelous works in this verse.
Psalm 9:1 explicitly praises God and declares 'I will show forth all thy marvellous works,' using the same phrase as this verse's call to remember them.
Psalm 77:11 says 'I will remember the works of the LORD; I will remember thy wonders of old,' directly paralleling this verse's command to remember His wonders.
Isaiah 43:18 instructs 'Remember ye not the former things' — a contrast to this verse's call to remember God's marvelous works.
Psalm 19:9 speaks of the LORD's rules as true and righteous — connecting to the 'judgments of his mouth' in the main verse.
Psalm 119:20 expresses longing for God's rules — related to the 'judgments of his mouth' theme but adds a desire element.
Psalm 119:75 affirms that God's rules are righteous — reinforcing the nature of His judgments mentioned here.
Psalm 119:137 declares that God's rules are right — echoing the righteousness of His judgments in the main verse.