Psalm 107:28
Then they cry unto the Lord in their trouble, and he bringeth them out of their distresses.
Cross-reference
Psalm 107:6 is nearly identical: 'Then they cried unto the LORD in their trouble, and he delivered them'—the same refrain within the psalm's pattern.
Psalm 107:13 repeats the same cry-and-deliver pattern: 'Then they cried... and he saved them'—another instance of the psalm's recurring structure.
Psalm 107:19 uses the same refrain of crying to the LORD in trouble and being delivered, forming a structural parallel within the psalm.
Psalm 50:15 commands calling on God in trouble for deliverance, directly echoing the action and promise in Psalm 107:28.
Jonah 1:14 shows the sailors crying out to the LORD in the storm, directly paralleling the cry and deliverance pattern of Psalm 107:28.
Matthew 8:25 records the disciples crying 'Lord, save us!' in a storm, mirroring the cry to the LORD for deliverance in Psalm 107:28.
Exodus 14:10 has the Israelites crying out to the LORD in terror at the Red Sea, a direct parallel to the cry for help in Psalm 107:28.
Judges 10:10 shows Israel crying out to the LORD after sinning, paralleling the pattern of distress and appeal in Psalm 107:28.
In Matthew 8:26, Jesus stills the storm after the disciples cry out — mirroring the same cry-and-deliverance pattern from the psalm.
In Jonah 1:5, the sailors cry out to their own gods during a storm, contrasting with crying to the LORD in Psalm 107:28.
Jonah 1:6 has the captain urging Jonah to call on his God, echoing the cry for help in a storm but as a command rather than an action.