Psalm 21:13
Be thou exalted, Lord, in thine own strength: so will we sing and praise thy power.
Cross-reference
Psalm 18:46 exalts God as 'my rock' and 'God of my salvation' — a parallel call to praise His strength.
Psalm 57:5 uses nearly identical wording: 'Be exalted, O God, above the heavens!' — a direct parallel to the exaltation cry here.
Psalm 59:16 directly says 'I will sing of your strength,' matching the praise of God's power in Psalm 21:13.
Psalm 99:5 commands 'Exalt the Lord our God,' directly echoing the call 'Be exalted, O Lord' in Psalm 21:13.
Psalm 108:5 begins 'Be exalted, O God,' identical phrasing to the opening of Psalm 21:13.
Psalm 72:19 desires the whole earth to be filled with God's glory, paralleling the call for His exaltation here.
In Psalm 46:10, the same call for God to be exalted is paired with a command to be still and know He is God.
Psalm 72:18 praises God who alone does wondrous things, echoing the focus on God's unique power and exaltation.
Psalm 113:5 asks 'Who is like the Lord our God, who is seated on high?' — exalting God's lofty position as here.
1 Chronicles 29:11 declares God's greatness, power, glory, and that He is 'exalted as head above all' — a strong thematic match.
Matthew 6:13 ends with 'yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory' — directly echoing the praise of God's power here.
In Revelation 11:17, the elders praise God for taking His great power and reigning — echoing the call to be exalted in strength here.
Revelation 15:3 records a song praising God's great deeds and just ways — directly parallel to the vow to sing and praise His power.
Isaiah 12:4 calls to proclaim that God's name is exalted, directly echoing the exaltation theme of Psalm 21:13.
Isaiah 5:16 says the Lord is exalted in justice, a parallel theme of God's exaltation but in a different context.