Psalm 102:24
I said, O my God, take me not away in the midst of my days: thy years are throughout all generations.
Cross-reference
Psalm 102:12 declares God's eternal enthronement, directly contrasting the psalmist's plea in verse 24 and affirming God's enduring years.
Psalm 9:7 also affirms God's eternal throne, reinforcing the contrast between human transience and God's everlasting years in verse 24.
Psalm 39:13 similarly pleads for relief before death, reinforcing the psalmist's cry not to be taken away in the midst of days.
Psalm 90:2 declares God from everlasting to everlasting — directly expanding on 'Your years are throughout all generations'.
Psalm 93:2 also declares God's throne established from of old, echoing the eternal years of God in Psalm 102:24.
Psalm 90:1 calls God our dwelling place through all generations — echoing the psalmist's trust in God's eternal presence.
Revelation 1:8 declares God as Alpha and Omega, the eternal Almighty — strongly affirming the psalmist's view of God's everlasting years.
Habakkuk 1:12 asks if God is not from everlasting and pleads 'we will not die' — mirroring the psalmist's plea not to be taken in midlife.
Isaiah 38:10-22 records Hezekiah's identical plea 'in the middle of my days' and his subsequent healing, echoing the psalmist's prayer.
Job 36:26 says God's years are unsearchable — directly paralleling the psalmist's declaration of God's eternal years.
Isaiah 38:12 similarly laments being cut off in the prime of life, mirroring the plea not to be taken away in the middle of days.
Jeremiah 15:15 also pleads 'do not take me away,' matching the cry for God's remembrance and preservation.
Daniel 4:34 praises God whose dominion endures from generation to generation, directly paralleling 'Your years are throughout all generations'.
Daniel 7:9 depicts the Ancient of Days, emphasizing God's eternal existence as in Psalm 102:24.
Job 10:5 questions if God's years are like man's — contrasting human brevity with God's eternal years in the main verse.
Revelation 1:4 describes God as the One who is, was, and is to come — a NT echo of God's eternal years.
Deuteronomy 33:27 calls God 'the eternal God' and 'dwelling place' — reinforcing the theme of God's everlasting refuge.