Psalm 102:18
This shall be written for the generation to come: and the people which shall be created shall praise the Lord.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 22:30, posterity serves the Lord and future generations are told about Him — nearly identical theme of recording for the unborn.
In Psalm 22:31, they proclaim His righteousness to a people yet unborn — directly parallel to Psalm 102:18's 'people yet to be created' praising God.
Psalm 45:17 promises God's name remembered in all generations leading to praise—directly parallel to recording for a future people to praise.
Psalm 71:18 expresses the same desire to declare God's power to the next generation — a parallel to recording for generations to come.
Psalm 78:4-6 commands telling the next generation God's deeds — directly parallel to recording for a people yet to be created.
Psalm 78:6 echoes the same purpose: teaching future generations about God's works, so they in turn teach their children.
Psalm 86:9 expands the scope: all nations will worship God, similar to the future people created praising Him in Psalm 102:18.
In 2 Peter 1:15, Peter ensures future remembrance — a deliberate effort to preserve teaching for later generations, mirroring Psalm 102:18's recording.
1 Peter 2:9 calls believers a chosen people to proclaim God's excellencies—directly mirrors the created people praising in Psalm 102:18.
In 2 Timothy 3:16, all Scripture is God-breathed and useful — affirming the value of written records for teaching, as Psalm 102:18 records for future praise.
In 1 Corinthians 10:11, events were written as warnings for us — a clear parallel to recording for future generations in Psalm 102:18.
In Romans 15:4, past writings teach and encourage us — the same principle of recording for the benefit of later readers.
In John 20:31, the Gospel's purpose is written so readers may believe — directly echoing Psalm 102:18's aim that future generations praise God.
Isaiah 43:21 describes a people formed to declare God's praise—identical in theme to the created people praising in Psalm 102:18.
Isaiah 43:7 says God created people for His glory—matching the 'people yet to be created' who will praise in Psalm 102:18.
Deuteronomy 31:19 instructs writing a song as a witness for future generations — akin to recording for a people yet to be created.
Exodus 17:14 commands writing a memorial for future generations — a precedent for recording God's works as in Psalm 102:18.
Isaiah 65:17-19 depicts new heavens and earth with rejoicing—a new creation context that parallels the future people created to praise.
In Daniel 9:2, Daniel studies written prophecies to understand God's timeline — showing scripture as a record for future generations to learn from.
In Job 19:24, Job wishes his words were engraved forever — a parallel desire for permanent recording, though for personal vindication rather than communal praise.
Job 19:23 longs for his words to be inscribed — a parallel desire to have something recorded for future generations.