Psalm 148:14
He also exalteth the horn of his people, the praise of all his saints; even of the children of Israel, a people near unto him. Praise ye the Lord.
Cross-reference
Psalm 75:10 uses the same 'horn' imagery for strength, promising to lift the righteous — paralleling God raising a horn for His people.
Psalm 89:17 declares God's favor exalts our horn, matching the theme of God raising a horn for His people.
Psalm 149:9 calls this honor for all his saints — a direct parallel to 'praise for all his saints' here, closing the Hallel psalms.
Psalm 132:17 promises a horn for David — likely the same horn God raises for his people here, linking to the Davidic king.
Psalm 75:4 warns the wicked not to lift up their horn — contrasting with God raising up a horn for his people here.
Psalm 92:10 uses the same 'exalted horn' metaphor — God raises strength for the individual, as this verse says for the people.
Psalm 112:9 says the righteous man's horn is exalted in honor — mirroring this verse's promise of exaltation for God's people.
Psalm 30:4 calls God's saints to sing praise — the same group described here as 'his saints' who receive praise from God.
Psalm 145:10 says all God's saints bless him — complementing this verse's 'praise for all his saints' as part of creation's worship.
In Deuteronomy 4:7, God's nearness to Israel is emphasized, directly echoing the 'people near to him' in this psalm.
In 1 Samuel 2:10, Hannah's prayer exalts the horn of God's anointed, directly paralleling the 'raised up a horn' for God's people here.
In Ezekiel 29:21, the same 'horn' imagery appears — God promises to raise up strength for Israel, echoing the exaltation of his people here.
In 1 Peter 2:9, believers are a chosen people for God's possession, paralleling the 'saints' and 'people near to him' here.
Exodus 19:5 calls Israel God's treasured possession — affirming the special nearness to God described here.
In Ephesians 2:17, Christ preaches peace to both far and near, broadening the 'near' concept from Israel to all believers.
In Ephesians 2:13, those far off are brought near through Christ — a New Testament expansion of the nearness promised to God's people here.
In 1 Samuel 2:1, Hannah declares her horn is exalted by God — a personal echo of the collective exaltation here.
Exodus 19:6 calls Israel a kingdom of priests — their nearness to God in this verse echoes that priestly role.
Luke 1:52 describes God exalting the humble — a NT reflection of the same divine reversal seen in this raising of Israel's horn.
In Deuteronomy 26:19, God promises to set Israel high in praise and honor, echoing the 'praise for his saints' and raising up a horn here.
In Ephesians 2:19, Gentiles become fellow citizens with the saints, mirroring the 'saints' who are God's people near him in this verse.