Psalm 108:11
Wilt not thou, O God, who hast cast us off? and wilt not thou, O God, go forth with our hosts?
Cross-references
In Psalm 44:9, the same lament of God rejecting and not going out with armies appears — a parallel expression of divine abandonment.
Psalm 60:1 opens with the same lament of rejection — this verse is part of the same psalm that Psalm 108 draws from.
Psalm 60:10 is the identical verse — Psalm 108 directly quotes this line from the earlier psalm.
In Deuteronomy 20:4, God promises to go with Israel to fight — directly opposing the psalm's claim that God does not go out with their armies.
In 2 Chronicles 13:12, Abijah declares God is with them at the head of the army — directly opposing the psalm's complaint that God does not go out with their armies.
In 2 Chronicles 20:15, the prophet assures that the battle is God's — directly countering the psalm's fear that God has rejected them and does not go out with their armies.
In Numbers 10:9, God promises to remember and save when trumpets sound — contrasting with the psalm's complaint that God has rejected and does not go out.
In 2 Chronicles 14:11, Asa prays for God's help in battle, trusting He will fight for them — contrasting with the psalm's doubt that God goes out with the army.