Psalm 46:2
Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea;
Cross-reference
Psalm 23:4 also declares fearlessness in danger ('I will fear no evil') because of God's presence, mirroring the confidence here.
Psalm 27:3 says 'my heart will not fear' even when an army besieges — the same defiant trust in God amid overwhelming threats.
Psalm 18:7 depicts the earth trembling and mountains shaking at God's anger — the same upheaval as in Psalm 46:2.
Psalm 56:4 declares 'I shall not be afraid' with trust in God, directly mirroring the psalmist's stance.
Psalm 91:5 promises no fear of night terrors, extending the same confidence to specific dangers.
Psalm 3:6 expresses similar confidence not to fear, though the threat is enemies rather than cosmic collapse.
Psalm 27:1 asks whom shall we fear, echoing the same confidence in God that underlies Psalm 46:2's refusal to fear.
Psalm 34:4 shows personal deliverance from fears, echoing the confidence that underlies not fearing cosmic collapse.
Psalm 49:5 asks why fear in trouble, paralleling the resolve not to fear despite upheaval.
2 Peter 3:10-14 depicts the earth's destruction by fire and urges holy living — a direct parallel to the psalm's confidence amid cosmic collapse.
Hebrews 13:6 quotes a similar confidence: 'The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid' — reinforcing the same fearless trust.
Luke 21:25-28 describes cosmic distress but then says 'lift up your heads, your redemption draws near' — echoing the psalm's call not to fear.
Isaiah 54:10 promises mountains may depart but God's love remains, exactly matching the earth giving way yet not fearing.
Isaiah 41:10 commands 'Fear not, I am with you', directly reinforcing the psalmist's refusal to fear.
Job 9:5 describes God overturning mountains in anger — the same divine power behind the mountains falling in Psalm 46:2.
Genesis 7:19 says the flood covered all the high hills — a literal fulfillment of 'mountains fall into the sea' that the psalmist says not to fear.
In Matthew 8:24-26, Jesus calms a storm that terrifies the disciples, demonstrating the power that makes fear unnecessary — a fulfillment of this trust.