Psalm 140:6
I said unto the Lord, Thou art my God: hear the voice of my supplications, O Lord.
Cross-reference
Psalm 27:7 cries 'Hear, O LORD, when I cry aloud; be gracious and answer me' — directly parallels the plea for God to hear here.
Psalm 28:1 pleads 'be not deaf to me' — a direct parallel to the request for God to hear the pleas for mercy in this verse.
Psalm 28:2 repeats the exact phrase 'voice of my pleas for mercy' — a direct parallel plea for divine attention.
Psalm 31:14 repeats the exact declaration 'I say, You are my God,' reinforcing the same personal confession of trust.
Psalm 142:5 echoes the cry 'I say, You are my refuge, my portion' — blending the declaration of God as God with a plea for help.
Psalm 143:10 uses the same confession 'You are my God' — a strong verbal link between two prayers.
Psalm 91:2 similarly declares 'my God, in whom I trust' — a parallel confession of God as personal refuge.
Psalm 55:1 also opens with 'Give ear' and a plea for mercy — a similar pattern of urgent prayer.
Psalm 64:1 pleads 'Hear my voice' — paralleling the main verse's call for God to listen to a cry.
Psalm 119:57 states 'The LORD is my portion' — a different image of belonging than 'You are my God', though both express covenant relationship.
Zechariah 13:9 prophesies a restored people saying 'The LORD is my God' — the same covenant declaration as here, fulfilled in the future.
Lamentations 3:24 declares 'The LORD is my portion' — a similar confession of God as one's inheritance, but in a context of lament.