Nehemiah 1:10

Now these are thy servants and thy people, whom thou hast redeemed by thy great power, and by thy strong hand.

Cross-references

In Exodus 32:11, Moses intercedes using 'great power' to redeem from Egypt — the same argument Nehemiah makes for his servants.

In Deuteronomy 9:29, Moses calls Israel 'your people whom you brought out by great power' — Nehemiah uses this exact redemption as his plea's foundation.

Psalm 74:2 Parallel

Psalm 74:2 echoes the plea for God to remember His redeemed congregation—reinforcing Nehemiah's prayer as a call to covenant faithfulness.

Psalm 136:12 celebrates God's strong hand and outstretched arm—the same redemptive power Nehemiah relies on in his prayer.

In Isaiah 63:16-19, the prophet pleads 'You are our Father... return for your servants' sake' — same appeal to God's redemption and ownership of Israel.

Isaiah 64:9 Parallel

In Isaiah 64:9, the prayer asks 'we are all your people' — the same identity-based plea Nehemiah uses for God's servants.

Daniel 9:15 Parallel

In Daniel 9:15, Daniel recalls the exodus redemption with 'mighty hand' — the same intercession pattern and historical appeal as Nehemiah's prayer.

Exodus 6:6 Allusion

Exodus 6:6 explicitly promises redemption with an outstretched arm—the 'redeemed' tie directly to Nehemiah's appeal.

Deuteronomy 9:26 records Moses' intercession using 'redeemed...with a mighty hand'—the same appeal Nehemiah makes for God's people.

2 Samuel 7:23 highlights God's unique redemption of Israel from Egypt—the same foundational event Nehemiah recalls.

1 Kings 8:51 calls Israel 'your people and your heritage' brought out of Egypt—the same identity Nehemiah claims for the exiles.

In Exodus 15:13, the song praises God for leading the redeemed by steadfast love — Nehemiah references the same redemption to ground his prayer.

Exodus 6:1 Parallel

Exodus 6:1 promises God's strong hand against Pharaoh—the same power Nehemiah appeals to for deliverance from exile.

Exodus 13:9 Parallel

Exodus 13:9 memorializes the exodus with a strong hand—the same mighty act Nehemiah invokes as precedent for God's saving power.

In Deuteronomy 15:15, Israel is commanded to remember their redemption from Egypt — Nehemiah uses that memory as the foundation for his plea.