Psalm 44:17
All this is come upon us; yet have we not forgotten thee, neither have we dealt falsely in thy covenant.
Cross-reference
Psalm 44:20 poses a hypothetical about forgetting God, directly echoing the assertion in Psalm 44:17 that they have not forgotten Him.
Psalm 9:17 pronounces judgment on those who forget God — the very sin the psalmist here claims they have avoided.
In Psalm 17:3, the psalmist similarly claims God tested his heart and found no sin — reinforcing the innocence declared here.
In Psalm 78:37, Israel's heart was not steadfast and they were unfaithful — the exact opposite of the faithfulness claimed here.
In Psalm 119:157, the psalmist does not swerve from God's testimonies despite many persecutors — mirroring this steadfastness.
Deuteronomy 6:12 warns Israel not to forget the LORD — the psalmist here affirms they have not forgotten.
Deuteronomy 8:14 warns against forgetting God when prosperous — the psalmist claims they have not forgotten despite suffering.
Isaiah 17:10 rebukes Israel for forgetting God — the psalmist here denies doing that.
Jeremiah 2:32 laments that God's people have forgotten Him — the psalmist insists they have not.
Jeremiah 31:32 describes Israel breaking the covenant — the psalmist claims they have not broken it.
Ezekiel 16:59 pronounces judgment for breaking the covenant — the psalmist asserts they have not broken it.
1 Chronicles 16:15 calls Israel to be mindful of God's covenant — the psalmist here claims they have been mindful.
Job 16:17 asserts Job's innocence in suffering — the psalmist similarly claims they have not broken covenant.
Daniel 9:13 confesses they did not seek God's favor despite disaster, contrasting Psalm 44:17's claim of not forgetting God.
Ezekiel 20:37 speaks of God bringing Israel into the covenant bond — the psalmist claims they have remained faithful to that covenant.
In 2 Corinthians 1:12, Paul boasts of a clear conscience and godly sincerity — echoing this appeal to integrity.