Psalm 119:94
I am thine, save me; for I have sought thy precepts.
Cross-reference
Psalm 119:40 echoes the plea for life based on devotion to precepts — parallel to 'save me, for I have sought your precepts'.
Psalm 119:173 uses the same pattern: a plea for help grounded in commitment to God's precepts — directly parallel to the main verse.
Psalm 119:45 also references seeking God's precepts — showing the outcome of freedom, while the main verse appeals for salvation on that same basis.
Psalm 119:125 declares 'I am your servant' — the same belonging as 'I am yours' — but asks for understanding rather than salvation.
Psalm 86:2 similarly pleads 'save your servant who trusts in you,' reinforcing the plea for salvation based on belonging to God.
Psalm 143:12 also grounds a plea for deliverance in the declaration 'I am your servant' — directly parallel to 'I am yours; save me'.
Isaiah 41:8-10 affirms God's choice of Israel and promise of help, paralleling the psalmist's confidence as God's own.
Isaiah 44:5 directly states 'I am the Lord's', matching the psalmist's declaration 'I am yours' — a strong verbal parallel.
In Acts 27:23, Paul declares belonging to the same God — echoing the psalmist's 'I am yours' in a context of divine protection.