Psalm 119:102
I have not departed from thy judgments: for thou hast taught me.
Cross-reference
Psalm 18:21 uses nearly identical language — 'I have not wickedly departed from my God' — reinforcing the same commitment to God's ways.
Psalm 71:17 testifies, 'O God, you have taught me from my youth' — the same grateful acknowledgment of divine teaching.
1 John 2:19 describes those who depart from the fellowship — the exact opposite of the psalmist's 'not turned aside'.
1 John 2:27 speaks of the Spirit's anointing teaching believers — another form of divine instruction that keeps them from straying.
2 Samuel 22:23 has David's identical declaration: 'from his statutes I did not turn aside' — a direct verbal parallel.
Daniel 9:5 confesses turning aside from God's commandments — the sin the psalmist claims to have avoided.
Jeremiah 32:40 shows God's covenant promise: He will cause His people not to turn away — the divine side of the same faithfulness.
Malachi 2:8 shows the opposite: priests turned from God's teaching and caused others to stumble, contrasting with the psalmist's faithful adherence.
Proverbs 5:7 urges sons not to depart from the father's words, extending the same principle of heeding divine teaching to a new audience.
John 7:17 affirms that doing God's will leads to recognizing divine teaching – echoing the psalmist's experience of being taught by God.