Isaiah 42:10
Sing unto the Lord a new song, and his praise from the end of the earth, ye that go down to the sea, and all that is therein; the isles, and the inhabitants thereof.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 42:4 says the coastlands wait for his law — now in verse 10 those same coastlands are called to praise.
In Isaiah 60:9, the isles bring tribute to God's name — echoing the same 'isles' called to sing in 42:10, showing distant nations responding to God.
Isaiah 42:4 establishes the coastlands as waiting for justice — here they are called to sing a new song.
Isaiah 49:13 calls the heavens and earth to sing for God's comfort – the same creation-wide praise as Isaiah 42:10.
Isaiah 44:23 calls the heavens, earth, and mountains to sing for God's redemption – a universal praise parallel to Isaiah 42:10's call.
Isaiah 24:14-16 describes people singing from the ends of the earth, matching the global praise commanded in Isaiah 42:10.
Isaiah 52:9 calls the ruins of Jerusalem to burst into song for redemption—similar imperative to sing joyfully for God's deliverance.
Isaiah 24:15 calls for glorifying God in the coastlands, the same 'islands' audience as the new song in Isaiah 42:10.
Isaiah 55:12 depicts mountains and trees bursting into song—personified creation's praise, echoing the call for all creation to sing.
Isaiah 54:1 also commands 'Sing!' to the barren woman, using the same verb for a different but related restoration context.
Isaiah 65:18 calls for gladness and rejoicing in God's new creation—a parallel mood of celebration, though not explicitly 'sing a new song'.
Isaiah 35:2 describes nature rejoicing at seeing God's glory—a parallel theme of joyful response, though not a direct call to sing.
Psalm 40:3 says God put a new song in the psalmist's mouth – showing the personal experience of the new song commanded in Isaiah 42:10.
Revelation 5:9 also describes a 'new song' sung by the redeemed from every nation — a direct parallel.
Paul quotes Psalm 117:1 here to show Gentiles praising God — directly fulfilling the call from the ends of the earth.
Zephaniah 2:11 says all the isles of the nations will worship God — matching the universal praise from distant shores in Isaiah 42:10.
Psalm 150:6's 'everything that has breath praise the Lord' is the ultimate fulfillment of this universal call.
Psalm 148 calls all creation — heavens, earth, sea creatures — to praise, matching the universal call here.
Psalm 117:1 echoes this call for all nations and peoples to praise the Lord — the same universal scope.
Psalm 107:23-32 describes those who 'go down to the sea' and then praise God for deliverance — same imagery.
Psalm 33:3 directly commands 'Sing to him a new song' – the exact same phrase as Isaiah 42:10, reinforcing the call.
Psalm 98:1-3 also begins 'Sing to the Lord a new song' and celebrates salvation – parallel to Isaiah 42:10's call.
Psalm 97:1 calls the 'multitude of isles' to be glad — directly echoing Isaiah 42:10's summons for the isles to sing God's praise.
Psalm 96:1-3 commands singing a new song and declaring God's glory among the nations – almost identical to Isaiah 42:10's global praise.
Psalm 149:1 also begins 'Sing to the Lord a new song', directly paralleling the same opening phrase.
In Revelation 5:13, every creature in heaven, earth, and sea praises God—fulfilling the cosmic worship called for in Isaiah 42:10.
Psalm 66:4 declares 'All the earth shall worship thee and sing' — a direct parallel to Isaiah 42:10's call for praise from the ends of the earth.
Acts 1:8 promises witnesses to the ends of the earth, directly echoing the geographic scope of praise in Isa 42:10 and fulfilling its missional vision.
Malachi 1:11 describes God's name great among the nations from east to west, directly echoing the global worship theme of Isa 42:10.
Psalm 67:4 calls the nations to sing for joy — similar to Isaiah 42:10's summons for all the earth to sing a new song.
Psalm 96:12 calls fields and trees to rejoice — echoing Isaiah 42:10's inclusion of sea and isles in the universal praise chorus.
Psalm 100:1 commands 'Make a joyful noise, all ye lands' — closely matching Isaiah 42:10's 'praise from the end of the earth'.
Psalm 103:22 summons all God's works everywhere to bless Him — parallel to Isaiah 42:10's universal call for praise from all creation.
Psalm 105:2 commands 'Sing unto him' — a direct parallel to the opening of Isaiah 42:10's 'Sing to the LORD a new song'.
Psalm 113:3 echoes the universal praise from sunrise to sunset, mirroring the call for all ends of the earth to sing.
Jeremiah 31:10 extends the call to distant coastlands, proclaiming God's gathering of Israel. Both emphasize global witness to God's acts.
Revelation 14:3 features a 'new song' but only the redeemed 144,000 can learn it — narrower scope.