Isaiah 64:7
And there is none that calleth upon thy name, that stirreth up himself to take hold of thee: for thou hast hid thy face from us, and hast consumed us, because of our iniquities.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 59:16, God sees no one to intervene — echoing the absence of anyone calling or striving.
Isaiah 57:17 says God hid his face in anger — directly matching the hidden face here due to sin.
In Isaiah 50:2, God laments that no one answered when he called — the same lack of response as here.
Isaiah 8:17 also speaks of God hiding his face, but the prophet waits and looks for him — a response of hope.
Isaiah 43:22 says 'thou hast not called upon me' — directly mirroring the complaint in Isaiah 64:7.
Isaiah 27:5 invites people to lay hold of God's protection — contrasting with no one doing so here.
In Deuteronomy 31:17, God warns He will hide His face from Israel for forsaking Him — the same judgment echoed here.
Hosea 7:7 says none of them call on me — directly parallel to no one calling on God's name.
Ezekiel 22:30 says God found no one to stand in the gap — mirrors the lack of anyone laying hold of him.
Deuteronomy 32:19-25 details the curses God brings when He hides His face — the consuming judgment referred to here.
In Nehemiah 1:6, he prays and confesses sins day and night — the very calling on God that Isaiah laments is missing.
Deuteronomy 32:20 states God hides His face from perverse Israel — the precise reason given here.
Jeremiah 2:6 recounts how Israel did not ask 'Where is the Lord?' — failing to seek him just as no one calls.
Jeremiah 10:25 mentions 'families that call not on thy name' — the same phrase, with consuming judgment.
Ezekiel 39:23 echoes the same hiding of God's face due to iniquity — both describe Israel's exile as divine judgment for sin.
Daniel 9:13 similarly laments that despite calamity, the people did not entreat the LORD — matching Isaiah's complaint of no one calling on God.
In Genesis 32:26, Jacob clings to God for blessing — here no one takes hold, highlighting Israel's failure.
In Hosea 5:15, God hides His face until Israel seeks Him — here no one seeks, so the hiding continues.
Psalm 14:4 describes evildoers who never call on the Lord — a specific instance of the general failure to call.
Hosea 7:14 says they do not cry out to God from their hearts — a similar lack of genuine calling.