Psalm 139:19
Surely thou wilt slay the wicked, O God: depart from me therefore, ye bloody men.
Cross-references
Psalm 6:8 contains the same command for evildoers to depart, echoing the psalmist's separation from the wicked.
Psalm 55:23 echoes 'bloodthirsty' and declares God will bring the wicked to the pit — directly supporting the plea for judgment.
Psalm 94:23 declares God will repay and destroy the wicked — directly affirming the petition for divine judgment.
Psalm 119:115 also commands evildoers to depart, reinforcing the psalmist's desire for separation.
Psalm 26:9 pleads not to be swept away with men of blood — a parallel plea for separation from the wicked.
Psalm 59:2 asks deliverance from evil workers and men of blood — similar to the psalmist's desire for God to act against the wicked.
Psalm 9:17 confirms the wicked return to the grave, reinforcing the psalmist's plea for God to slay them.
Psalm 64:7 portrays God striking down the wicked with arrows, a vivid parallel to the desire for God to slay them.
Matthew 7:23 has Jesus saying 'Away from me, you evildoers' — a direct parallel to the psalmist's cry against the wicked.
Matthew 25:41 pronounces 'depart from me' on the cursed at final judgment — a NT fulfillment of the psalmist's plea.
Isaiah 11:4 describes the Messiah slaying the wicked with his breath — a prophetic extension of the same divine judgment.
Genesis 49:6 has Jacob distancing himself from Simeon and Levi's violence — parallel to the psalmist's 'depart from me' to men of blood.
2 Corinthians 6:17 calls believers to separate from the unclean — a NT application of the psalmist's separation from the wicked.