Psalm 119:15
I will meditate in thy precepts, and have respect unto thy ways.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 119:6, fixing eyes on all God's commandments results in no shame—directly echoing the same focus on God's ways.
Psalm 119:23 shows the psalmist meditating on God's statutes despite opposition from princes, echoing the same commitment to meditate on God's precepts.
Psalm 119:48 repeats the same action of lifting hands to God's commandments and meditating on His statutes, reinforcing the devotion expressed here.
Psalm 119:78 contrasts the arrogant who wrong the psalmist with the psalmist's own meditation on God's precepts, directly echoing the focus here.
Psalm 119:97 expresses love for God's law and constant meditation on it, directly paralleling the psalmist's commitment to meditate on God's precepts.
Psalm 119:148 shows the psalmist meditating on God's word through the night watches, directly paralleling the commitment to meditate on God's precepts.
In Psalm 119:117, the psalmist asks for safety to continually regard God's statutes—linking meditation with ongoing devotion.
Psalm 1:2 describes the righteous person meditating on God's law day and night, directly paralleling the psalmist's focus on meditating on God's precepts.
In Psalm 104:34, personal meditation is offered to God—both verses highlight meditation as a pleasing spiritual discipline.
In James 1:25, looking into the perfect law parallels fixing eyes on God's ways—both emphasize persistent meditation leading to blessing.
In Joshua 1:8, meditating on the law day and night is commanded for success—identical theme of focused meditation on God's word.
In 1 Timothy 4:15, Paul urges immersion in sound teaching—parallel to meditating on precepts, both call for devoted attention.