Psalm 13:4
Lest mine enemy say, I have prevailed against him; and those that trouble me rejoice when I am moved.
Cross-references
Psalm 9:19 prays 'let not man prevail' — directly parallel to 'lest mine enemy say I have prevailed'.
In Psalm 25:2, the psalmist asks that enemies not exult over him — nearly identical plea to this verse.
In Psalm 35:19, David similarly prays that enemies not rejoice over him wrongfully — same plea against enemy gloating.
Psalm 35:25 echoes the fear of enemies saying 'We have swallowed him up' — parallel to 'I have prevailed'.
Psalm 38:16 repeats the concern: enemies rejoice when foot slips — same image of being moved.
Psalm 55:22 promises the righteous will never be moved — opposite of the fear of being moved in Psalm 13:4.
Psalm 62:2 declares 'I shall not be greatly moved' — contrasting with the fear of being moved in Psalm 13:4.
Psalm 62:6 declares 'I shall not be shaken' — directly opposing the fear of being shaken in Psalm 13:4, offering confidence in God as rock.
Psalm 121:3 assures 'He will not let your foot be moved' — directly answering the fear of being shaken in Psalm 13:4.
Psalm 30:1 thanks God for not letting foes rejoice — the exact opposite outcome of the fear in Psalm 13:4, showing deliverance.
Psalm 41:11 states 'my enemy will not shout in triumph' — directly parallel to the fear of enemy rejoicing, but as confident assurance.
Psalm 112:6 promises the righteous 'will never be moved' — contrasting the psalmist's fear of being shaken by enemies.
Micah 7:8 tells the enemy 'Rejoice not over me' — directly parallels the fear of enemy rejoicing, but with confident hope of rising.
Proverbs 12:3 says the righteous 'will never be moved' — contrasting the psalmist's fear of being shaken by enemies.
Jeremiah 1:19 promises enemies will not prevail — opposite outcome to the fear in Psalm 13:4.
Revelation 11:10 describes the world rejoicing over the prophets' death — a similar scenario of enemies rejoicing over the righteous.