Psalm 119:113
I hate vain thoughts: but thy law do I love.
Cross-reference
Psalm 119:97 also declares love for God’s law — reinforcing the devotion that contrasts with the double-mindedness in v113.
Psalm 119:103 describes God’s words as sweet — showing the delight in the law that accompanies the hatred of double-mindedness.
In Psalm 119:163, the same 'I hate... but I love your law' pattern appears, with falsehood replacing double-mindedness as the object of hatred.
Psalm 94:11 declares human thoughts are merely a breath — revealing the emptiness of the double-minded thinking the psalmist hates.
Psalm 101:3 hates the work of those who fall away — similar rejection of double-mindedness and commitment to purity.
Jeremiah 4:14 urges washing the heart from evil and removing wicked thoughts — directly addressing the double-minded condition the psalmist rejects.
Romans 7:22 declares delight in God's law — the very same love for the law expressed here, reinforcing the psalmist's devotion.
Isaiah 55:7 calls the wicked to forsake their thoughts and return to God — the repentance that matches rejecting double-mindedness.
Romans 7:15 describes Paul's inner conflict of doing what he hates — mirroring the struggle against double-mindedness, though not using the same term.
2 Corinthians 10:5 calls for taking every thought captive to obey Christ — the solution to the double-mindedness the psalmist hates.
1 Chronicles 29:18 prays for God to direct hearts toward Him — the opposite of the double-mindedness the psalmist hates.
Matthew 15:19 lists evil thoughts from the heart — the source of the double-mindedness hated here, connecting inner dividedness to sinful actions.
Mark 7:21 traces evil thoughts to the heart — showing the internal source of the double-mindedness the psalmist hates.