Psalm 41:11

By this I know that thou favourest me, because mine enemy doth not triumph over me.

Cross-reference

Psalm 13:4 Parallel

Psalm 13:4 pleads that the enemy not say 'I have prevailed' — same concern as David's enemy not triumphing.

Psalm 31:8 Parallel

Psalm 31:8 thanks God for not shutting him into enemy's hand — parallels David's assurance that enemy does not triumph.

Psalm 35:25 Parallel

Psalm 35:25 prays enemies not say 'We have swallowed him up' — identical theme of preventing enemy triumph.

Psalm 86:17 Parallel

In Psalm 86:17, David similarly asks for a sign of God's favor so his enemies will be put to shame—mirroring the assurance of delight here.

Psalm 25:2 Parallel

Psalm 25:2 prays 'let not my enemies triumph over me'—almost identical wording to the confidence expressed here that they will not.

Psalm 30:1 Parallel

Psalm 30:1 thanks God for not letting foes rejoice over the psalmist—directly parallel to the enemy not shouting in triumph here.

Psalm 27:12 Parallel

Psalm 27:12 pleads not to be given over to adversaries—a related prayer for protection from enemies, though less specific about triumph.

Psalm 124:6 Parallel

Psalm 124:6 praises God for not letting enemies devour Israel—a broader communal echo of the personal enemy triumph avoided here.

Jeremiah 20:13 calls for praise because God delivers the needy from evildoers—a similar deliverance theme, though from a prophet's lament.