Psalm 146:6
Which made heaven, and earth, the sea, and all that therein is: which keepeth truth for ever:
Cross-references
Psalm 148:5 calls for praise because He created all things at His command—same creation theme.
Psalm 136:6 continues with God spreading out the earth—echoing 'Maker of the earth' in this verse.
Psalm 136:5 credits God with making the heavens and adds 'His love endures forever'—matching the faithfulness here.
Psalm 148:6 says He established the heavens forever—reinforcing the everlasting faithfulness mentioned here.
In Psalm 100:5, God's truth endures to all generations—directly parallel to the eternal truth-keeping here.
Psalm 33:6 similarly declares the Lord made the heavens by His word, reinforcing the creation theme here.
Psalm 95:5 similarly states 'The sea is his, for he made it' and 'his hands formed the dry land,' reinforcing God's ownership via creation.
Psalm 90:2 describes God forming the earth from eternity, a direct parallel to the creation declaration in Ps 146:6.
Psalm 134:3 blesses from Zion 'he who made heaven and earth' — directly repeats the same creation formula.
Psalm 124:8 declares our help is in the name of the LORD who made heaven and earth, a direct parallel to Ps 146:6's creation affirmation.
Psalm 121:2 identifies the Creator of heaven and earth as the source of help, reinforcing the same basis for trust in Ps 146:6.
Psalm 115:15 blesses by the LORD who made heaven and earth, directly echoing the creation statement in Ps 146:6.
Psalm 9:10 states God does not forsake those who seek Him, directly echoing 'keeps faith forever' in Ps 146:6.
In Psalm 98:3, God remembers His truth toward Israel—mirroring the promise that He keeps truth forever.
Revelation 14:7 echoes the same creation phrase 'made the heavens, the earth, the sea' as a call to worship the Creator before judgment.
Jeremiah 10:11 contrasts idols that did not make the heavens and earth with the true Creator, reinforcing God's uniqueness as Maker.
Jeremiah 10:12 expands on God's creative work: by His power, wisdom, and understanding He made the earth and heavens.
Jeremiah 32:17 affirms God made heavens and earth by great power and adds 'Nothing is too hard for you,' linking creation to omnipotence.
John 1:3 identifies the Word (Jesus) as the agent through whom all things were made, revealing the Trinitarian dimension of creation.
Colossians 1:16 expands that all things were created through and for Christ, including invisible realms, deepening the creation theology.
In Hebrews 6:18, God's unchangeable nature and inability to lie reinforce the Psalm's claim that He remains faithful forever.
Genesis 1:1 is the original declaration that God created the heavens and the earth—exactly summarized here.
Exodus 20:11 uses nearly identical language: 'the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them' as Sabbath basis.
Job 38:8-11 details God's sovereign control over the sea at creation—setting its boundaries—expanding on His making of the sea.
In Deuteronomy 7:9, God is the faithful God who keeps covenant—expanding on the truth-keeping promised here.
Isaiah 37:16 addresses God as 'you have made heaven and earth' — identical creation confession in a prayer.
Nehemiah 9:6 echoes the exact creation formula of this Psalm, declaring God as maker of heaven, earth, seas, and all in them.
2 Chronicles 2:12 blesses the Lord who made heaven and earth, directly affirming the same creation declaration as this Psalm.
Jeremiah 27:5 declares God made the earth with power — a fuller creation statement matching the first half of the verse.
In 2 Kings 19:15, Hezekiah prays to God as maker of heaven and earth, directly mirroring the creation statement in this Psalm.
Jeremiah 51:15 attributes creation to God's power and wisdom — expands on the same creative act.
Lamentations 3:23 proclaims 'great is your faithfulness' — directly reinforces the 'keeps faith forever' theme.
Jonah 1:9 identifies God as 'who made the sea and the dry land' — the same creation language about sea and earth.
1 Peter 4:19 calls God 'faithful Creator', directly combining the two attributes from this verse.
Deuteronomy 32:4 calls God a God of faithfulness and without iniquity, echoing the Psalm's theme of His enduring faithfulness.
Acts 7:50 quotes God as creator of all things ('my hand made all these') — another NT echo of the creation confession.
Exodus 34:6 reveals God as abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, supporting the Psalm's declaration of His eternal faithfulness.
In Daniel 9:4, Daniel confesses God as keeping covenant and mercy—consistent with the faithful God described here.
In Titus 1:2, God cannot lie—underscoring the absolute truthfulness and reliability of His promises, matching the eternal truth-keeping here.
In Micah 7:20, God will perform truth to Jacob—showing His faithfulness to covenant promises, akin to keeping truth forever.
In Proverbs 8:29, wisdom describes God setting the sea's boundary and founding the earth—echoing the creative power mentioned here.