Psalm 107:11

Because they rebelled against the words of God, and contemned the counsel of the most High:

Cross-reference

Psalm 73:24 Contrast

Psalm 73:24 contrasts by showing the blessing of receiving God's counsel, unlike the rebellion here.

In Psalm 106:43, Israel's repeated rebellion brought them low — the same pattern of rebellion leading to suffering described here.

Psalm 119:24 delights in God's testimonies as counselors, contrasting with despising counsel here.

Psalm 68:6 Parallel

In Psalm 68:6, God leads out prisoners but the rebellious dwell in a parched land — directly linking rebellion to captivity as here.

Psalm 68:18 Parallel

In Psalm 68:18, the ascended Lord leads captives and receives gifts from the rebellious — showing God's victory over rebellion, contrasting the prisoners' state here.

2 Chronicles 25:16 directly depicts despising a prophet's counsel, mirroring the rejection of divine counsel here.

Acts 20:27 Contrast

Acts 20:27 contrasts by declaring the whole counsel of God, while Psalm 107:11 speaks of despising it.

Luke 7:30 Parallel

Luke 7:30 describes Pharisees rejecting God's purpose — equivalent to despising the counsel of the Most High.

Jeremiah 44:16 shows direct refusal to listen to God's word — the same rebellion against His words described here.

Proverbs 1:31 Related theme

Proverbs 1:31 describes the consequence of rejecting counsel—eating the fruit of one's ways—linking cause and effect.

Proverbs 1:30 repeats the theme of despising counsel and reproof, strongly paralleling this verse.

Proverbs 1:25 uses nearly identical language: ignoring counsel and refusing reproof, echoing the rebellion here.

2 Chronicles 33:10 records Manasseh ignoring God's words, a direct parallel to rebelling and despising counsel.

Lamentations 1:18 echoes the same confession: rebellion against God's commandment brings righteous judgment, just as Psalm 107:11 describes despising His counsel.

1 Samuel 15:23 explicitly equates rebellion with rejecting the word of the LORD — directly matching Psalm 107:11.

In Isaiah 63:10, rebellion grieves the Holy Spirit and makes God an enemy — explaining the divine opposition behind the captivity here.

Isaiah 5:19 Parallel

In Isaiah 5:19, people mockingly call for God's counsel to come — a specific form of despising it, as in Psalm 107:11.

In Lamentations 3:39-42, the call to examine ways and confess rebellion mirrors the reason for suffering here — both link sin to punishment.

In Lamentations 5:15-17, joy ceases and hearts faint because of sin — the same consequence of rebellion described here.

In Revelation 3:18, Christ offers counsel to the lukewarm church — a direct contrast to those who despised the counsel of the Most High in Psalm 107:11.