Psalm 5:3
My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O Lord; in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up.
Cross-reference
Psalm 55:17 explicitly mentions morning prayer along with evening and noon, reinforcing the practice.
Psalm 88:13 says 'in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee,' directly echoing the morning prayer of Psalm 5:3.
Psalm 119:147 mentions praying before dawn, paralleling the morning prayer and looking up in Psalm 5:3.
Psalm 59:16 also mentions singing in the morning, directly paralleling the psalmist's morning devotion.
Psalm 63:1 echoes the same earnest seeking of God — a thirst that parallels the morning prayer vigil.
Psalm 22:2 describes crying day and night without answer, contrasting the confident morning prayer of Psalm 5:3.
Psalm 141:2 parallels the morning prayer with the evening sacrifice — both present petitions to God as an offering.
Psalm 130:6 uses the morning watch as a metaphor for waiting on the Lord, similar to the morning expectation in Psalm 5:3.
Mark 1:35 shows Jesus rising early to pray, mirroring the psalmist's morning devotion.
Genesis 19:27 describes Abraham rising early to go before the LORD, similar to the psalmist's morning prayer posture.
1 Samuel 1:19 records early morning worship, echoing the psalmist's practice of morning devotion.
Job 1:5 describes Job rising early to offer sacrifices, a morning act of devotion similar to the psalmist's prayer.
Isaiah 26:9 echoes the morning longing for God, though with a focus on yearning rather than presenting requests.