Psalm 144:10
It is he that giveth salvation unto kings: who delivereth David his servant from the hurtful sword.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 18:50, God gives salvation to his king and shows steadfast love to David, paralleling the victory and rescue of David here.
Psalm 140:7 describes David's personal deliverance in battle — echoing the rescue from the deadly sword.
In Psalm 33:16-18, salvation comes from God's steadfast love, not military might, reinforcing that God alone grants victory to kings.
1 Samuel 17:45 recounts David's faith in God's name against Goliath — a key instance of God rescuing David from the sword.
2 Samuel 8:6-14 narrates David's military victories — the historical fulfillment of God giving victory to David, his servant.
2 Samuel 21:16 records a Philistine giant threatening David — a specific 'deadly sword' situation from which God rescued him.
2 Samuel 21:17 shows David's men protecting him — the rescue from the deadly sword through human means.
Isaiah 45:1-6 reveals God's sovereignty in giving victory to Cyrus, a foreign king — extending the principle beyond Israel.
Jeremiah 27:6-8 declares God gives victory to Nebuchadnezzar over many nations — another example of God empowering kings.
2 Samuel 22:51 celebrates God's salvation to his king and anointed — a parallel thanksgiving for the same deliverance.
2 Samuel 23:10 records God giving a great victory through Eleazar, illustrating how God rescues His servant in battle.
1 Chronicles 14:11 shows God breaking through David’s enemies, a concrete instance of the victory attributed to God.
1 Chronicles 18:13 summarizes that God gave David victory wherever he went, directly echoing the theme of divine deliverance.
2 Chronicles 32:22 recounts God saving Hezekiah from enemies, a parallel example of God rescuing a king.