Psalm 105:1
O give thanks unto the Lord; call upon his name: make known his deeds among the people.
Cross-reference
Psalm 145:12 explicitly says 'make known your mighty deeds,' almost identical wording to the command here.
Psalm 89:1 parallels the call to make known God's faithfulness to all generations, a similar proclamation theme.
Psalm 96:3 urges declaring God's glory and marvelous works among the peoples, directly echoing the mission here.
Psalm 136:1-3 opens with the same call 'O give thanks unto the LORD', forming a direct parallel.
Psalm 145:4-6 expands on commending God's works and declaring his mighty acts from generation to generation.
Psalm 145:11 speaks of speaking the glory of God's kingdom and telling of his power, a parallel call to proclamation.
Psalm 107:22 commands sacrificing thank offerings and telling of His works — directly paralleling the call to give thanks and declare His deeds.
Psalm 107:31 calls to give thanks for His wonderful deeds — a direct echo of the same imperative in Psalm 105:1.
Psalm 116:13 uses the exact phrase 'call on the name of the Lord' — a verbal link to the same action commanded here.
In Psalm 9:11, the same call to sing praise and tell of God's deeds appears — a parallel exhortation to make His works known.
Psalm 44:1 recounts hearing God's deeds from ancestors — echoing the call to make known His works, but from a past perspective.
Psalm 108:1 expresses a steadfast heart to sing — a personal response to the corporate call to give thanks and call on His name.
In Daniel 6:27, Darius specifically recounts God's rescuing signs and wonders — matching the call here to tell of His marvelous works.
In Daniel 4:1-3, Nebuchadnezzar directly fulfills this psalm's command: he declares God's wonders and greatness to all peoples.
Isaiah 12:4 repeats this exact call to give thanks and make known God's deeds, showing it as a prophetic song of praise.
1 Chronicles 16:8-22 contains the identical thanksgiving psalm, with verse 8 echoing 'Give thanks to the LORD'.
In 1 Chronicles 16:8, this verse is quoted verbatim as David brings the ark to Jerusalem — giving it a narrative setting.
Romans 10:13 quotes Joel 2:32, echoing the call on the Lord's name for salvation, a key NT theme.
In Exodus 18:8, Moses tells Jethro about God's deliverance — a direct narrative example of the 'make known' command in this verse.
Acts 9:14 describes believers as those who 'call on your name' (Jesus), applying the OT phrase to Christian identity.
1 Corinthians 1:2 addresses those who 'call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,' linking the OT phrase to the church.
Joel 2:32 uses the same phrase 'call on the name of the Lord' but promises salvation to those who do, shifting from praise to deliverance.
In Daniel 6:26, Darius issues a decree praising God's enduring kingdom — exactly the kind of public declaration this verse commands.
Isaiah 46:9 calls to remember former things and declares God's uniqueness — reinforcing the command to make known His acts among nations.
In Deuteronomy 32:3, Moses proclaims God's greatness — the same ascribing of glory called for in this verse to make God known.