Psalm 55:5
Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me, and horror hath overwhelmed me.
Cross-reference
Psalm 88:15 describes bearing God's terrors and despair, closely matching David's horror and trembling.
Psalm 143:4 says 'my spirit faints, my heart is appalled' — a very close parallel to David's fear and trembling here.
Psalm 88:16 also describes being overwhelmed by God's dreadful assaults — a parallel lament of intense terror.
Psalm 56:3 acknowledges fear but turns to trust — a parallel recognition of fear, with a different response.
Psalm 61:2 cries out from a faint heart, seeking refuge—a parallel response to distress.
Psalm 77:3 describes moaning and fainting when remembering God — a parallel experience of overwhelming distress.
Psalm 119:120 speaks of trembling in reverent fear of God, unlike David's terror from enemies—a different object of fear.
Psalm 102:4 depicts a withered heart and loss of appetite — parallel physical symptoms of deep anguish.
2 Samuel 15:14 records David's actual flight from Absalom, the historical event behind this psalm's fear and trembling.
In Ezekiel 7:18, horror covers them — same Hebrew word for horror as here, depicting divine judgment's terror.
Job 23:15 expresses terror before God, paralleling David's fear but with a more direct focus on God.
Job 23:16 says God made his heart faint and terrified him, echoing David's trembling before terrors.
Genesis 32:7 shows Jacob greatly afraid and distressed — a parallel fear in the face of danger, like David's.
Job 6:4 describes God's arrows and terrors overwhelming him, similar to David's experience of horror.
In Proverbs 18:14, a crushed spirit is unbearable — similar to the overwhelming fear and trembling here, both describing inner collapse.