Psalm 28:6
Blessed be the Lord, because he hath heard the voice of my supplications.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 31:21, the same blessing formula thanks God for showing steadfast love in distress — a parallel thanksgiving.
Psalm 31:22 uses the identical phrase 'heard the voice of my pleas for mercy' — a direct echo of the deliverance.
Psalm 66:20 also begins with 'Blessed be God' and thanks him for not rejecting prayer — a strong parallel.
Psalm 116:1 directly echoes 'heard my voice and my pleas for mercy' — nearly identical wording.
Psalm 118:5 echoes the same pattern: calling on the LORD in distress and being answered, reinforcing God's faithfulness to hear prayer.
Psalm 107:19-22 describes crying to the LORD and being delivered — a narrative parallel to answered prayer.
Psalm 116:2 says God inclined his ear — a parallel of God attentively hearing prayer.
Psalm 66:19 affirms God listened to the voice of prayer — a general parallel to God hearing pleas.
Psalm 69:33 states the LORD hears the needy — a parallel theme of God responding to cries.
Job 33:26 describes God being favorable to one who prays, showing a similar promise of answered prayer and restored relationship.