Psalm 44:9
But thou hast cast off, and put us to shame; and goest not forth with our armies.
Cross-references
In Psalm 44:23, the psalmist pleads for God to awake — directly responding to the rejection stated in verse 9.
Psalm 108:11 nearly verbatim repeats 'Have you not rejected us... no longer go out with our armies?' — a direct echo of Psalm 44:9.
Psalm 43:2 echoes the same lament of being rejected by God, asking 'Why have you rejected me?' — parallel to the psalmist's complaint.
Psalm 60:1 opens with the same cry 'You have rejected us' — a direct parallel to the psalmist's lament of rejection.
Psalm 60:10 repeats the exact phrase 'rejected us and no longer go out with our armies' — a direct parallel to the lament in Psalm 44:9.
Psalm 74:1 asks 'Why have you rejected us forever?' — a parallel lament of divine rejection similar to Psalm 44:9.
Psalm 88:14 directly asks 'Why do you reject me?' — the same verb 'reject' as Psalm 44:9, intensifying the lament of divine abandonment.
Psalm 89:38-45 describes God rejecting his anointed and breaking down walls — a strong parallel to the rejection and humiliation in Psalm 44:9.
Romans 11:1-6 argues God has not rejected his people — a direct theological contrast to the lament of rejection in Psalm 44:9.
Lamentations 3:31 declares 'no one is cast off by the Lord forever' — directly countering the sense of permanent rejection in Psalm 44:9.
Jeremiah 33:24-26 acknowledges the perception of rejection but affirms God will not reject Israel forever — contrasting the lament in Psalm 44:9.
In Lamentations 1:6, Zion's splendor departs and princes flee — a vivid picture of the humiliation Psalm 44 laments.
In 1 Samuel 4:2, Israel's defeat by Philistines exemplifies the same divine abandonment — God no longer going out with their armies.
In Lamentations 5:22, the same cry 'you have utterly rejected us' echoes Psalm 44's opening lament.
Judges 2:14 describes God giving Israel over to enemies — the same pattern of divine rejection and military defeat as in Psalm 44:9.
Lamentations 3:32 promises compassion after grief — offering hope beyond the humiliation described in Psalm 44:9.
In Job 29:5, Job recalls when God was with him — contrasting with Psalm 44's lament that God has withdrawn.
In Job 19:6, Job feels God has wronged him — a personal parallel to the national rejection in Psalm 44:9.