Psalm 10:6
He hath said in his heart, I shall not be moved: for I shall never be in adversity.
Cross-references
Psalm 10:11 gives the reason for this confidence: 'God has forgotten' — the same wicked person's inner reasoning.
Psalm 11:1 declares trust in the Lord as refuge—opposite to the wicked's self-assured boast here.
Psalm 14:1 records the fool's heart saying 'no God'—parallel to the wicked's heart saying 'I shall not be moved' here.
Psalm 15:5 promises the righteous 'shall never be moved'—contrasting the wicked's empty boast here.
Psalm 30:6 repeats the same boast 'I shall never be moved' from David's past pride—directly echoing this verse.
Psalm 53:1 has the fool saying 'There is no God' — a similar heart-statement of arrogant denial, though different focus.
Ecclesiastes 8:11 shows delayed justice emboldens evil — the same logic behind the wicked's false security here.
Isaiah 47:7 has Babylon boasting 'I shall be mistress forever' — identical arrogance of never facing adversity.
1 Thessalonians 5:3 warns of sudden destruction when people say 'peace and security' — directly echoing this false confidence.
Isaiah 47:8 says 'I am, and there is no one besides me; I shall not sit as a widow' — nearly identical boast of security.
Jeremiah 5:12 echoes the same arrogant denial of judgment: 'He will do nothing; no disaster will come upon us.' Both express false security.
Matthew 24:48 has the wicked servant saying in his heart 'my master is delayed'—same pattern of false security as here.
Isaiah 56:12 depicts drunkards assuming 'tomorrow will be like today' — a similar presumption of unbroken prosperity.