Psalm 35:22
This thou hast seen, O Lord: keep not silence: O Lord, be not far from me.
Cross-reference
Psalm 10:1 asks why God stands far away — same concern as 'be not far from me' in the psalmist's plea.
Psalm 22:11 says 'Be not far from me' — identical plea for God's nearness in distress.
Psalm 22:19 cries 'do not be far off' — a parallel appeal for God's swift help.
Psalm 28:1 pleads 'be not deaf' — a parallel cry for God not to be silent, similar to 'be not silent' here.
Psalm 38:21 echoes the same plea 'be not far from me', reinforcing the psalmist's cry for God's nearness.
Psalm 39:12 asks God to 'hold not your peace' — same appeal for God to respond, not remain silent.
Psalm 50:21 shows God's silence as judgment — He was silent but now rebukes. Contrasts with the plea for God not to be silent.
Psalm 71:12 repeats 'be not far from me' and adds 'make haste', intensifying the urgency of the plea.
Psalm 83:1 directly says 'do not keep silence' — an identical plea for God to act against enemies.
Psalm 10:14 directly says 'Thou hast seen it', confirming God's awareness of injustice as in the main verse.
Psalm 109:1 pleads 'Hold not thy peace', identical in meaning to 'keep not silence' in the main verse.
Exodus 3:7 shows God seeing Israel's affliction — the same divine awareness the psalmist appeals to in 'you have seen'.
Isaiah 65:6 uses the same phrase 'I will not keep silence' but for judgment, contrasting the psalmist's plea for help.
Acts 7:34 quotes Exodus 3:7 — God sees and comes to deliver, echoing the psalmist's plea for God to see and not be silent.
Ezekiel 7:22 says God will turn His face away — the opposite of the plea 'be not far from me'.
Habakkuk 1:13 says God cannot look on evil, while the psalmist asks God to see his plight — a tension about divine sight.