Psalm 142:7
Bring my soul out of prison, that I may praise thy name: the righteous shall compass me about; for thou shalt deal bountifully with me.
Cross-reference
Psalm 9:14 similarly expresses the intent to praise God in the gates after salvation — a direct parallel to the praise pledge in Ps 142:7.
Psalm 13:6 uses the exact phrase 'dealt bountifully with me'—the same confidence in God's goodness that prompts thanksgiving here.
Psalm 22:21-27 follows a similar pattern: cry for deliverance from affliction, then promise to praise in the congregation — echoing the structure and hope here.
In Psalm 88:4-8, the same imagery of being trapped in a pit appears — but without the hope of release, highlighting the desperation behind this prayer.
Psalm 116:7 repeats 'dealt bountifully with you'—a call to rest in God's goodness, echoing the psalmist's gratitude after deliverance.
Psalm 143:11 echoes the same plea to be brought out of trouble for the sake of God's name — a parallel petition for deliverance.
Psalm 146:7 declares that the LORD sets prisoners free — the very action this plea requests, showing God's character as deliverer.
Psalm 40:2 describes being drawn up from a pit—a rescue from confinement similar to the prison deliverance requested here.
Psalm 9:3 describes enemies stumbling — the hoped-for outcome in Ps 142:7 when God sets the psalmist free.
Psalm 119:17 pleads 'Deal bountifully with your servant'—the same verb appears as a request, while Psalm 142:7 states it as a future hope.
Isaiah 61:1 promises liberty to captives — a messianic fulfillment that answers the plea here, as Christ proclaims release from spiritual prison.
Acts 12:7 recounts an angel freeing Peter from prison — a literal fulfillment of the plea for release from prison in the main verse.