Psalm 119:133
Order my steps in thy word: and let not any iniquity have dominion over me.
Cross-reference
Psalm 119:116 asks God to 'uphold me according to your promise', closely paralleling the request to 'keep steady my steps according to your promise' here.
In Psalm 119:45, seeking precepts brings freedom—echoing the prayer that sin not rule, linking obedience to liberty.
Psalm 19:13 prays 'let them not have dominion over me' — directly matching the plea against iniquity's dominion here.
Psalm 121:3 assures that God keeps your foot from slipping — echoing the prayer for ordered steps and protection from sin's dominion.
Psalm 37:23 states the Lord orders a good man's steps — directly affirming what the psalmist asks for here.
Psalm 40:2 says God established my goings — a testimony of past deliverance and stable steps, echoing the request for ordered steps.
Psalm 17:5 declares 'my steps have held fast to your paths', while this verse prays that God would keep steps steady — a shared image of walking in God's ways.
Psalm 32:8 promises divine instruction and guidance 'in the way you should go', directly related to the request here that God keep one's steps steady.
1 Samuel 2:9 says God keeps the feet of His saints — reinforcing the same request for divine guidance and protection from iniquity.
Romans 6:14 declares 'sin shall not have dominion over you' — the same promise of freedom from sin's rule that the psalmist prays for.
Romans 7:23 describes sin's law bringing captivity — the opposite of the prayer for no iniquity to have dominion; shows the struggle.
Romans 7:24 cries 'who shall deliver me?' — a parallel cry for rescue from sin's power, matching the plea for no dominion.
In John 8:36, Jesus promises true freedom from sin—answering the psalmist's prayer that sin not rule, showing Christ as the source.
In Romans 7:21, Paul describes evil's constant presence—the very struggle the psalmist prays to be delivered from.
In Galatians 5:17, the flesh-Spirit conflict explains why sin threatens to rule—the battle the psalmist prays against.
In Luke 22:40, Jesus instructs prayer to avoid temptation—similar to the psalmist's plea that sin not rule over him.