Psalm 18:29
For by thee I have run through a troop; and by my God have I leaped over a wall.
Cross-reference
Psalm 144:1 expands on the same idea: God equips the psalmist for battle, training his hands for war.
Psalm 144:10 directly attributes victory to God, rescuing David from the sword — same theme of divine deliverance in battle.
Psalm 108:13 declares 'Through God we will do valiantly' — nearly identical confidence in God-given strength to overcome enemies, reinforcing the same truth.
Psalm 44:6 echoes the same reliance on God rather than human weapons for victory, contrasting trust in military might.
Psalm 44:7 similarly credits God with saving His people from foes, reinforcing the theme of divine deliverance in battle.
1 Samuel 17:49 records the historical event where David, empowered by God, defeats Goliath — the kind of victory celebrated in Psalm 18:29.
In 2 Samuel 5:19, David inquires of God before battle, showing the same reliance on divine strength for victory.
In 2 Samuel 5:20, God 'breaks through' enemies — the same divine empowerment that enables leaping over walls.
In 2 Samuel 5:25, David obeys God's battle plan and wins — illustrating the source of strength in Psalm 18:29.
2 Samuel 22:30 is the exact same verse — David's song of deliverance repeated.
In 1 Samuel 14:13, Jonathan climbs up a cliff to attack the Philistines — a literal 'leaping over a wall' with God's help, illustrating the same divine empowerment.
1 Samuel 23:2 shows David inquiring of the LORD before battle, receiving divine assurance — the same reliance on God expressed in Psalm 18:29.
1 Samuel 30:8 records David again seeking the LORD's guidance for battle, receiving a promise of success — consistent with the confidence in Psalm 18:29.
Ephesians 6:10-13 calls believers to draw strength from God for spiritual battle — a NT parallel to David's physical battles.
Colossians 2:15 describes Christ's triumph over spiritual powers — a NT fulfillment of God's victory through David.