Psalm 119:110
The wicked have laid a snare for me: yet I erred not from thy precepts.
Cross-reference
Psalm 119:85 describes the insolent digging pitfalls — directly paralleling the snare laid here, with the added note they ignore God's law.
In Psalm 119:157, the contrast between many persecutors and steadfast obedience to God's statutes echoes the same theme of not straying despite foes.
Psalm 124:7 uses the same snare imagery — escaped like a bird from the fowler's snare — directly illustrating deliverance from the trap described here.
Psalm 140:5 uses the same snare and trap imagery — the proud hiding snares, directly matching the wicked laying a snare here.
Psalm 141:9 is a parallel prayer for protection from snares laid by the wicked, echoing the same threat and need for deliverance.
In Psalm 38:12, the same image of enemies setting traps appears, reinforcing the psalmist's experience of being surrounded by hostile plots.
Psalm 10:8-18 depicts the wicked ambushing the innocent — a detailed picture of the same snare-laying behavior mentioned here.
Jeremiah 18:22 directly parallels the imagery of hidden snares dug for the prophet, confirming the pattern of persecution against God's faithful.
In Luke 20:19-26, religious leaders set a verbal trap for Jesus, mirroring the wicked's snare here—both avoid the trap by clinging to God's truth.