Psalm 31:20
Thou shalt hide them in the secret of thy presence from the pride of man: thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion from the strife of tongues.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 140:5, the proud set snares — the same proud enemies from whom God hides the faithful in Psalm 31:20.
In Psalm 140:3, tongues are sharpened like a serpent — the same malicious speech from which God protects in Psalm 31:20.
Psalm 27:5 uses the same hiding-in-God's-shelter imagery — being concealed in His tent during trouble, directly paralleling the protection described here.
Psalm 32:7 directly calls God a hiding place who preserves from trouble — the same refuge theme as the cover and shelter in this verse.
Psalm 64:2 echoes the same plea for hiding from the plots of the wicked — a direct parallel to the protection from 'plots of men' here.
Psalm 91:1-4 expands on the shelter and refuge theme — dwelling in God's shadow and being covered under His wings, paralleling the hiding in God's presence here.
Psalm 83:3 describes enemies conspiring and plotting against God's people — the exact threat from which Psalm 31:20 says God hides them.
Psalm 10:2 describes the wicked's arrogant pursuit and schemes — the same 'plots of men' that God hides from here, but from the oppressor's perspective.
Psalm 23:5 depicts God's provision in the presence of enemies — a different image of the same divine protection from hostile forces in Psalm 31:20.
Psalm 36:11 prays for protection from the arrogant and wicked — a parallel plea to being hidden from the plots and strife in this verse.
Psalm 86:14 describes insolent men seeking the psalmist's life — similar to the 'plots of men' and 'strife of tongues' from which God hides here.
Psalm 40:4 blesses those who make the Lord their trust — a related theme to taking refuge in God, which is the basis for the hiding here.
In Psalm 124:5, proud waters overwhelm the soul — the same kind of threat from pride that God shelters from in Psalm 31:20.
In James 4:6, God resists the proud — the same opposition to pride that causes God to shelter the humble in Psalm 31:20.
In Job 5:21, being hid from the scourge of the tongue mirrors the protection from strife of tongues in Psalm 31:20.
Isaiah 26:20 also calls God's people to hide in their rooms until wrath passes, echoing the shelter theme of Psalm 31:20.
In 1 Kings 17:3, God commands Elijah to hide from Ahab — a literal example of the shelter from enemies described in Psalm 31:20.
1 Kings 18:10 shows Ahab's relentless search for Elijah — the very kind of 'plots of men' from which God hides the faithful in Psalm 31:20.
Ezekiel 11:16 says God himself becomes a sanctuary for the exiled, paralleling the shelter in God's presence from Psalm 31:20.
Zephaniah 2:3 urges seeking humility to be sheltered on the day of the Lord, similar to the hiding theme in Psalm 31:20.
In 1 Timothy 6:4, the same malicious talk and strife from conceited people is described — the very threat from which God hides the faithful.
James 3:5 illustrates how a small tongue can boast and cause great harm — the same 'accusing tongues' that God protects against in Psalm 31:20.
James 3:6 calls the tongue a fire that corrupts — directly echoing the destructive power of the accusing tongues from which God shelters.
James 3:14-16 traces bitter envy and selfish ambition as the source of disorder and evil practice — the root of the plots and slander in Psalm 31:20.