Psalm 119:49
Remember the word unto thy servant, upon which thou hast caused me to hope.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 119:43, the psalmist declares his hope is in God's rules — the same hope he bases his plea on here.
In Psalm 119:74, the psalmist says he has hoped in God's word — the same hope that emboldens his request.
In Psalm 119:81, the psalmist says he hopes in God's word — the foundation for his plea that God remember.
In Psalm 119:147, the psalmist hopes in God's words — the same hope that motivates his cry for God to remember.
In Psalm 119:38, the same plea for God to act on His word to His servant appears — both petitions for God to fulfill His promise.
In Psalm 119:42, trusting God's word enables answering taunts — echoing the hope from God's word in verse 49.
In Psalm 105:42, God remembered His holy promise — directly answering the plea here for God to remember His word that gives hope.
In Psalm 106:45, God remembers His covenant — the same faithfulness the psalmist appeals to here.
Psalm 130:5 directly mirrors the hope in God's word — 'I wait for the Lord... in his word I put my hope.'
In Genesis 32:9, Jacob calls on God to remember His promise — mirroring the psalmist's plea.
In 2 Samuel 7:25, David prays for God to confirm his word — a direct parallel to the psalmist's plea for God to remember his word.
In 1 Kings 8:26, Solomon asks God to confirm his word to David, mirroring the psalmist's request for God to remember his word.
1 Chronicles 17:23 records David's prayer for God to establish his word, a close parallel to the psalmist's petition for God to remember his word.
Nehemiah 1:8 directly asks God to remember his word to Moses, matching the psalmist's plea — both appeal to God's past promises.
In Genesis 8:1, God remembered Noah and fulfilled His promise — a historical precedent for God remembering His word.