Psalm 119:26

I have declared my ways, and thou heardest me: teach me thy statutes.

Cross-reference

In Psalm 119:106, the psalmist's sworn commitment to keep God's rules follows the request for teaching in 119:26—showing progression from prayer to pledge.

In Psalm 119:12, the same petition 'teach me your statutes' appears—reinforcing the psalmist's constant plea for instruction.

In Psalm 119:135, the same petition 'teach me thy statutes' echoes the request for instruction, reinforcing the psalmist's consistent plea for God's teaching.

Psalm 119:124 closes 'teach me your statutes' — a repeated plea for instruction.

Psalm 119:108 requests 'teach me your rules' — another instance of the same petition.

Psalm 119:68 also says 'teach me your statutes' — a direct parallel in context.

Psalm 119:64 echoes 'teach me your statutes' — the same refrain in the same psalm.

Psalm 119:33 says 'Teach me, O LORD, the way of your statutes' — identical plea within the same psalm.

Psalm 25:4 Parallel

In Psalm 25:4, 'make me know your ways, teach me your paths' echoes the request for teaching in 119:26—identical theme.

Psalm 143:8-10 includes 'Teach me to do your will' — a parallel petition for instruction.

Psalm 86:11 Parallel

Psalm 86:11 similarly asks 'Teach me your way, O LORD, that I may walk in your truth.'

Psalm 27:11 Parallel

Psalm 27:11 also prays 'Teach me your way, O LORD' — a parallel request for divine guidance.

Psalm 25:9 Parallel

In Psalm 25:9, God leads the humble and teaches them, complementing the psalmist's humility in declaring his ways in 119:26.

Psalm 25:8 Parallel

In Psalm 25:8, God is described as instructing sinners, directly answering the plea for teaching in 119:26—showing God's willingness to teach.

Psalm 25:5 Parallel

Psalm 25:5 directly pleads 'Lead me in your truth and teach me' — same request for teaching.

Psalm 38:18 Parallel

In Psalm 38:18, confessing iniquity with sorrow aligns with the declaration of ways in 119:26—both are acts of humility before God.

Psalm 32:5 Parallel

In Psalm 32:5, confessing sin and receiving forgiveness parallels the declaration of ways in 119:26—both involve honest communication with God.

In Proverbs 28:13, confessing and forsaking sins brings mercy, echoing the psalmist's openness in declaring his ways—both emphasize honesty.

1 Kings 8:36 invokes God teaching his people 'the good way' — a parallel theme of divine teaching in prayer.