Psalm 44:2
How thou didst drive out the heathen with thy hand, and plantedst them; how thou didst afflict the people, and cast them out.
Cross-reference
Psalm 78:55 uses identical language: God drove out nations and settled Israel, directly reinforcing the conquest account in Psalm 44:2.
Psalm 80:8 uses the vine metaphor for Israel, saying God drove out nations and planted it, matching Psalm 44:2's planting imagery.
Psalm 136:17-22 repeats the conquest of kings and land inheritance, mirroring the divine action in Psalm 44:2.
Psalm 135:10-12 lists the conquest of kings and giving their land as heritage, exactly the event described in Psalm 44:2.
Psalm 136:21 repeats the giving of their land as a heritage, reinforcing the same historical act of dispossession.
Psalm 111:6 directly parallels: God gave Israel the inheritance of the nations, the same act of driving out and planting.
Psalm 105:44 says God gave the lands of nations to Israel, a parallel to driving out nations and planting them in Psalm 44:2.
Joshua 11:23 describes Joshua taking the whole land and giving inheritance — the 'planting' and 'settling' the psalmist refers to.
Nehemiah 9:22-27 recounts God giving lands, driving out nations, and multiplying Israel — a historical summary matching Psalm 44:2's praise.
Joshua 24:12 explicitly states God sent the hornet to drive out the Amorites — directly paralleling the 'drove out the nations' theme.
Joshua 21:43 states God gave all the land as sworn — this is the fulfillment of the driving out and planting in Psalm 44:2.
Joshua 10:42 summarizes God fighting for Israel in conquest — the psalmist credits God directly for driving out nations.
Joshua 10:11 shows God throwing hailstones on the Amorites — a specific instance of divine warfare echoing the driving out in Psalm 44:2.
Deuteronomy 7:1 repeats the promise of clearing seven nations — this is the covenant context for the land gift in Psalm 44:2.
Exodus 15:17 promises God will plant Israel on His mountain, using the same 'plant' verb as Psalm 44:2 for the settlement.
Exodus 34:11 records God's promise to drive out the Canaanite nations — the very act the psalmist celebrates as God's handiwork.
Exodus 23:28 promises hornets to drive out nations — a specific method of the divine action praised in Psalm 44:2.
Acts 7:45 explicitly states that God drove out nations before Israel, directly referencing the same event as Psalm 44:2.
In Nehemiah 9:24, the Levites recount God subduing Canaanites and giving the land — mirroring the action in Psalm 44:2.
In 2 Chronicles 20:7, Jehoshaphat prays that God drove out the land's inhabitants for Israel — the same conquest theme.
In 1 Chronicles 17:21, the prayer recalls God driving out nations before His redeemed people — a direct parallel to Psalm 44:2.
In 1 Chronicles 17:9, God promises to 'plant' Israel in their own place — the same planting metaphor used in Psalm 44:2.
In Judges 11:24, Jephthah argues that Israel possesses land God dispossessed before them — echoing the divine conquest theme.
In Judges 6:9, God reminds Israel He drove out their enemies and gave them the land — the same act of conquest Psalm 44:2 recalls.
Joshua 23:3 summarizes God's fighting for Israel against all nations — echoing the comprehensive victory in Psalm 44:2.
Joshua 3:10 declares God will drive out Canaanites — a specific fulfillment of the pattern in Psalm 44:2.
Deuteronomy 31:3 promises God himself will destroy nations before Israel — reinforcing the divine action in Psalm 44:2.
Deuteronomy 4:38 describes God driving out greater nations to give Israel their land — a direct parallel to the same historical claim.
Jeremiah 32:23 recounts Israel taking possession of the land, the result of God driving out nations, but adds their disobedience.