Psalm 135:14
For the Lord will judge his people, and he will repent himself concerning his servants.
Cross-references
In Psalm 90:13, the plea for God to have pity on His servants matches the promise of compassion here.
In Psalm 106:45, God relents because of His covenant love — illustrating the compassion promised here.
Deuteronomy 32:36 is the source verse—identical promise that the Lord will vindicate and have compassion on his servants.
Hosea 11:8 expresses God's tender compassion that will not give up Israel—directly matching the compassion theme of this verse.
Hosea 11:9 declares God will not execute fierce anger—reinforcing the compassionate nature promised to his servants.
Jonah 4:2 confesses God as gracious, merciful, and relenting—the same compassion promised to his servants here.
In Hebrews 10:30, the quote 'the Lord will judge his people' reinforces God's vindication of His people.
In 2 Samuel 24:16, God relents from destroying Jerusalem — an example of His compassion on His servants.
In Jeremiah 18:8, God relents from disaster when people repent — an example of His compassion on His servants.
Amos 7:3 shows God relenting from locust judgment after Amos' intercession—a concrete act of compassion on Israel.
Amos 7:6 shows God relenting from fire judgment—further illustrating the compassion this verse promises.
Judges 10:16 shows God's compassion stirred by Israel's misery—a narrative parallel to his compassion on his servants here.
1 Chronicles 21:15 records God relenting from destroying Jerusalem—an example of the compassion promised to his people.