Psalm 103:10
He hath not dealt with us after our sins; nor rewarded us according to our iniquities.
Cross-reference
Psalm 130:3 asks who could stand if God marked sins — the same mercy that withholds due punishment.
Psalm 28:4 prays for God to repay the wicked according to their deeds—the opposite of Psalm 103:10's assurance that He does not repay us for our sins.
Psalm 119:124 asks God to deal with the psalmist according to His steadfast love, not according to sin—a direct plea for the same merciful treatment.
Ezra 9:13 confesses God punished less than our iniquities deserved — the same mercy as not repaying according to sins.
Nehemiah 9:31 highlights God's mercy not making an end of them — the same forbearance from full punishment.
Job 11:6 states God exacts less than guilt deserves — the same truth that God does not repay according to sins.
Lamentations 3:22 declares God's mercies never end — the basis for not repaying us according to our sins.
In Daniel 9:18, Daniel pleads for mercy not based on righteousness but on God's great mercy—echoing the same reliance on divine grace rather than deserved punishment.
Daniel 9:19 continues the plea for forgiveness and mercy, reinforcing the theme that God does not repay according to sin but acts for His own name's sake.
In Habakkuk 3:2, the prophet asks God to remember mercy even in wrath—a direct parallel to the assurance that God does not give us what our sins deserve.
In 1 Kings 11:34, God spares Solomon's kingdom despite his sin for David's sake—a concrete example of not repaying according to iniquity.
In Luke 15:20, the father's embrace illustrates God's mercy not repaying sins, mirroring Psalm 103:10's promise.
Leviticus 16:22 depicts the scapegoat carrying away sins—a ritual picture of removal, while Psalm 103:10 speaks of God not repaying sins; both address sin's disposal.