Psalm 111:1

Praise ye the Lord. I will praise the Lord with my whole heart, in the assembly of the upright, and in the congregation.

Cross-reference

Psalm 9:1 Parallel

Psalm 9:1 says 'I will give thanks to the LORD with my whole heart' — almost verbatim the same opening as Psalm 111:1.

Psalm 22:25 Related theme

Psalm 22:25 similarly describes praise in the great congregation, linking to the assembly mentioned here.

Psalm 35:18 Related theme

Psalm 35:18 also gives thanks in the great congregation, reinforcing the public praise theme.

Psalm 40:9 Related theme

Psalm 40:9 proclaims glad news in the great congregation, echoing the public declaration of God's works.

Psalm 107:32 directly calls to extol God in the congregation and assembly of elders — very close parallel.

Psalm 138:1 Parallel

Psalm 138:1 echoes the same wholehearted praise — 'with my whole heart' — before a different audience (gods/angels).

Psalm 149:1 Parallel

Psalm 149:1 also calls for praise in the assembly of the faithful, mirroring the same setting and exhortation.

Psalm 26:12 Parallel

Psalm 26:12 declares praise in the great congregation, directly echoing the assembly setting of Psalm 111:1.

Psalm 68:26 Parallel

Psalm 68:26 commands praise in the great congregation and assembly of Israel, a direct parallel to the corporate praise theme.

Psalm 135:1 Parallel

Psalm 135:1 calls for praise to the LORD, echoing the same exhortation as the opening of Psalm 111:1.

Psalm 112:1 Parallel

Psalm 112:1 shares the same opening 'Praise the LORD' but then shifts to blessing the righteous, a thematic companion.

2 Chronicles 6:4 records Solomon praising God before the assembly, directly paralleling the public praise in Psalm 111:1.

Revelation 19:1 begins with 'Hallelujah', the same Hebrew phrase as 'Praise the LORD' in Psalm 111:1, linking earthly and heavenly praise.

In 1 Chronicles 29:10-20, David leads the assembly in public praise and blessing, echoing the corporate worship context.

2 Chronicles 20:26-28 depicts Jehoshaphat and the people praising God together in assembly, similar to the corporate praise setting.