Nehemiah 5:19

Think upon me, my God, for good, according to all that I have done for this people.

Cross-reference

Nehemiah 13:14 repeats this same prayer verbatim — 'Remember me, O my God, concerning this' — reinforcing the recurring theme.

Nehemiah 13:22 echoes the same plea — 'Remember me, O my God, concerning this also' — extending the pattern.

Nehemiah 13:31 closes the book with 'Remember me, O my God, for good' — the same petition.

In Nehemiah 6:14, he prays 'Remember Tobiah and Sanballat... according to their works' — a contrast: here he asks for remembrance of enemies' evil, not his own good.

Psalm 18:23-25 describes God rewarding according to righteousness — the same principle behind Nehemiah's appeal for remembrance of his good deeds.

Psalm 25:7 Contrast

Psalm 25:7 pleads 'Remember not my sins' and asks for mercy, directly contrasting Nehemiah's request to remember his good deeds.

Psalm 106:4 Parallel

Psalm 106:4 says 'Remember me, O LORD, when you show favor to your people' — nearly identical plea for personal remembrance.

Mark 9:41 Parallel

In Mark 9:41, Jesus assures that a cup of water given in His name will not lose reward — similar to Nehemiah asking God to remember his kindness to the people.

In Matthew 25:34-40, Christ identifies service to 'the least of these' as service to Him — echoing Nehemiah's request that God remember his service to the people.

In Matthew 10:42, Jesus promises a reward for giving a cup of water to a disciple — a parallel to Nehemiah's plea for God to remember his good deeds to His people.

In 2 Kings 20:3, Hezekiah prays 'Remember, O Lord, how I have walked before you in faithfulness' — a direct parallel to Nehemiah's 'Remember me for good.'

Hebrews 6:10 assures that God does not forget good works — directly answering Nehemiah's plea to be remembered for his service.

In 2 Timothy 1:16, Paul prays for mercy on Onesiphorus for his service — a parallel plea for God to remember faithful acts.

Isaiah 38:3 Parallel

In Isaiah 38:3, Hezekiah prays 'Remember, O Lord, how I have walked before you' — nearly identical request to Nehemiah's for remembrance of good deeds.

In Jeremiah 15:15, Jeremiah cries 'Remember me and visit me, and take vengeance' — both ask for remembrance, but Jeremiah focuses on vengeance, Nehemiah on good.

In Psalm 119:159, the psalmist asks God to 'consider how I love your precepts' — both appeal to God based on personal faithfulness.

Genesis 40:14 has Joseph ask a human to remember him, whereas Nehemiah appeals to God — similar request, different recipient.

Hosea 9:17 Contrast

Hosea 9:17 speaks of God rejecting the disobedient — contrasting with Nehemiah's plea to be remembered for good.