Psalm 138:5
Yea, they shall sing in the ways of the Lord: for great is the glory of the Lord.
Cross-reference
Psalm 27:6 declares singing and making melody to the LORD, directly parallel to singing of His ways and glory.
Psalm 67:4 calls the nations to sing for joy because God judges with equity - a parallel theme of joyful praise from all peoples.
Revelation 19:1 cries 'Salvation and glory belong to our God', echoing the psalm's praise of God's glory.
Revelation 7:12 gives blessing and glory to God, directly parallel to the psalm's 'great is the glory of the LORD'.
Isaiah 6:1-3 describes a vision of God's glory filling the earth, the very greatness this psalm declares is sung about.
Revelation 5:12-14 proclaims glory to the Lamb, mirroring the psalm's declaration of God's great glory.
Revelation 4:11 ascribes glory to God for creation, parallel to praising His glory and ways in the psalm.
Jeremiah 31:12 explicitly says they will sing aloud on Zion and be radiant over God's goodness — a direct parallel to singing of His glory.
Zephaniah 3:14 commands singing and shouting for joy — the same call to praise that Psalm 138:5 envisions when people sing of God's ways.
2 Corinthians 4:6 reveals that the glory of God is seen in the face of Jesus Christ — the same glory this psalm declares is great.
Judges 5:3 has Deborah and Barak singing praise to the LORD, same act of singing about God's ways.
Isaiah 52:7-10 calls for singing about God's salvation and glory, directly paralleling the singing of God's ways and great glory in Psalm 138:5.
Malachi 1:11 echoes that God's name is great among the nations, paralleling the worldwide acclaim of His glory in this psalm.
Ephesians 1:12 echoes the theme of living for praise of God's glory, connecting OT singing to NT purpose.
Ephesians 1:6 speaks of the praise of the glory of God's grace, echoing the psalm's theme of God's glory being praised.
John 13:31 shows Jesus' glorification as the moment God's glory is revealed, connecting to the psalm's declaration of the LORD's glory.
Luke 19:38 blesses the King and declares glory — echoing the glory of the LORD that Psalm 138:5 says people sing about.
Exodus 15:11 is an earlier song celebrating God's unique glory, echoing the praise of His ways and greatness in this psalm.
Isaiah 65:14 shows God's servants singing for gladness — the same joyful response to His ways and glory as in this psalm.
John 13:32 continues, showing that God glorifies the Son, reflecting the glory the psalm proclaims as great.
John 17:1 has Jesus praying for the Father to glorify Him so He may glorify the Father — the same glory the psalm celebrates.
Jeremiah 31:7 calls for singing and praise for God's salvation of Israel - a similar act of praise but focused on Israel's restoration.
Exodus 33:19 shows God revealing His glory by proclaiming His name and goodness — the glory the psalm calls great.
In Exodus 33:18, Moses asks to see God's glory — the same glory this psalm declares is great and worthy of song.