Psalm 44:4

Thou art my King, O God: command deliverances for Jacob.

Cross-reference

Psalm 74:12 Parallel

Psalm 74:12 also calls God 'my King' who works salvation, directly echoing this verse's plea for God to ordain salvation as King.

Psalm 68:28 Parallel

Psalm 68:28 echoes the plea for God to command victories, calling on Him to summon His power for His people.

Psalm 71:3 Parallel

Psalm 71:3 uses the same 'command' language, asking God to give a command to save, reinforcing the theme of divine decree for deliverance.

Psalm 20:9 Parallel

Psalm 20:9 cries 'O Lord, save the king' — a parallel plea for salvation, though focused on the king rather than the nation.

Psalm 89:18 Parallel

Psalm 89:18 declares the Lord as our king, reinforcing the same kingship theme as this verse's address to God as King.

Psalm 145:1 Parallel

Psalm 145:1 addresses God as King, echoing the opening of Psalm 44:4, though the context shifts to general praise.

Isaiah 33:22 explicitly says the Lord is our king who will save us, closely matching this verse's prayer for God as King to ordain salvation.

Joshua 23:10 declares the Lord fights for Israel — the same divine action of ordaining salvation that the psalmist pleads for.

1 Samuel 11:13 states 'the Lord has worked salvation in Israel' — a direct parallel to the psalmist's request for God to ordain salvation.

Hosea 13:10 Contrast

Hosea 13:10 contrasts human kings who fail to save with God as the true King who commands victories.

In Genesis 45:7, God ordains salvation by sending Joseph to preserve a remnant — a direct example of the deliverance prayed for here.