Psalm 148:11
Kings of the earth, and all people; princes, and all judges of the earth:
Cross-reference
Psalm 2:10-12 addresses kings and rulers to serve the Lord—parallels the call for earthly rulers to praise in Psalm 148:11.
Psalm 22:27-29 speaks of all nations and kings worshiping the Lord—parallels the universal call to rulers and peoples in Psalm 148:11.
Psalm 68:31 mentions nobles (princes) from Egypt and Cush coming to God—directly parallels the princes and rulers in Psalm 148:11.
Psalm 72:10 expands on kings from distant lands bringing tribute — the same call for all earthly rulers to honor God.
Psalm 72:11 declares all kings bowing and nations serving — directly echoing the universal rule of praise here.
Psalm 86:9 says all nations will worship and glorify God — parallel to the call for kings and peoples to praise.
Psalm 102:15 links nations fearing God and kings honoring His glory — the same universal worship theme.
Psalm 138:4 specifies kings giving thanks to the Lord — a direct parallel to the call for rulers to praise.
Psalm 138:5 continues the theme of kings singing about God's ways — reinforcing the call to praise.
In Psalm 117:1, all nations and peoples are explicitly called to praise—directly parallel to this verse's 'all peoples'.
Isaiah 49:23 depicts kings bowing low to God's people — a prophetic image of rulers submitting to God's authority.
Isaiah 60:3 shows nations and kings coming to the light — fulfilling the vision of all rulers honoring God.
In Revelation 21:24, kings of the earth bringing glory into the New Jerusalem fulfills the universal call to praise here—nations now worship in the city.
In Revelation 19:5, all servants, small and great, are called to praise God—echoing the universal call to praise in this psalm.