Psalm 122:1

I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the Lord.

Cross-reference

Psalm 84:1 Parallel

Psalm 84:1 exclaims how lovely God's tabernacles are, directly parallel to the gladness of entering His house.

Psalm 26:8 Parallel

Psalm 26:8 declares 'I love the house where you dwell,' closely paralleling the delight in going to God's house.

Psalm 132:7 Parallel

Psalm 132:7 says 'Let us go to his dwelling place; let us worship at his footstool' — nearly identical to the call here.

Psalm 42:4 Parallel

Psalm 42:4 recalls going with the multitude to God's house with joy, mirroring the gladness of being called to worship.

Psalm 55:14 Parallel

Psalm 55:14 remembers walking to God's house in sweet company, adding a communal dimension to the joyful invitation.

Psalm 84:2 Parallel

Psalm 84:2 longs and faints for the courts of the Lord, expressing intense desire for the same place of worship.

Psalm 84:10 Parallel

Psalm 84:10 values a day in God's courts above a thousand elsewhere, underscoring the preciousness of the house.

Jeremiah 50:5 echoes the invitation 'Come, let us join ourselves to the LORD' with faces toward Zion, mirroring the call to go.

Micah 4:2 Parallel

Micah 4:2 says 'Come, let us go up to the house of the God of Jacob' — a direct parallel to the call to go to the Lord's house.

Zechariah 8:21-23 describes nations saying 'Let us go' to seek the Lord in Jerusalem, expanding the invitation to all peoples.

Isaiah 2:3 Parallel

Isaiah 2:3 invites many to go up to the Lord's house, expanding the call to all nations with a similar phrase.

Jeremiah 31:6 has watchmen crying to go up to Zion, echoing the invitation to worship in God's house.

In Ezekiel 24:25, the LORD takes away the temple as the delight of their eyes — opposite the joy of going to His house in Psalm 122:1.

In Ecclesiastes 8:10, the wicked frequent the holy place yet die futilely — contrasting the glad invitation to go to the house of the LORD in Psalm 122:1.