Psalm 146:10
The Lord shall reign for ever, even thy God, O Zion, unto all generations. Praise ye the Lord.
Cross-references
Psalm 10:16 declares the LORD is King forever — the exact same assertion of eternal reign as Psalm 146:10.
Psalm 145:13 says God's kingdom is everlasting and His dominion endures — a strong parallel to the LORD reigning forever in Psalm 146:10.
In Exodus 15:18, the same declaration of God's eternal reign appears after the Red Sea crossing, anchoring the psalm's praise in Israel's foundational deliverance.
Isaiah 9:7 promises a never-ending kingdom on David's throne, connecting the psalm's statement of God's reign to the messianic hope.
Isaiah 52:7 announces 'Your God reigns' to Zion, directly paralleling the psalm's message of God's kingship.
Daniel 2:44 foretells a kingdom set up by God that will never be destroyed, echoing the psalm's theme of God's everlasting dominion.
Daniel 6:26 declares from a pagan king that God's kingdom endures forever, confirming the psalm's universal truth.
Daniel 7:14 gives the Son of Man everlasting dominion, linking the psalm's reign to the eschatological king.
Revelation 11:15 declares Christ's eternal reign, directly alluding to the psalm's phrase 'reign forever' in the NT consummation.
In Jeremiah 8:19, the people cry out questioning 'Is the LORD not in Zion?' — a contrast to the psalm's confident declaration of His eternal reign.
Lamentations 5:19 repeats almost verbatim 'You, O LORD, reign forever' — a direct echo of the psalm's affirmation amid despair.
Daniel 4:34 has Nebuchadnezzar praising God's everlasting dominion — similar language of eternal reign from a pagan king who learned humility.