Psalm 109:1

Hold not thy peace, O God of my praise;

Cross-reference

Psalm 28:1 Parallel

Psalm 28:1 pleads 'be not silent to me' — the same cry for God to speak, directly paralleling 'hold not thy peace'.

Psalm 35:22 Parallel

Psalm 35:22 says 'keep not silence' — a direct parallel to the psalmist's plea for God to break his silence.

Psalm 83:1 Parallel

Psalm 83:1 echoes the same plea for God to break His silence against enemies — a direct parallel in wording and context.

Psalm 50:21 Contrast

Psalm 50:21 shows God's silence followed by rebuke — contrasting with the psalmist's plea for God to not be silent now.

Deuteronomy 10:21 calls God 'your praise' — the same concept as 'God of my praise', identifying God as the one worthy of praise.

Jeremiah 17:14 also calls God 'my praise' while pleading for healing — mirroring the psalmist's cry to the God of his praise.

In Isaiah 42:14, God declares He will break His long silence — contrasting with the psalmist's plea for God to not be silent.