Psalm 6:8
Depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping.
Cross-reference
Psalm 119:115 uses the same phrase 'Depart from me, you evildoers,' reinforcing the call to separate from the wicked.
Psalm 56:8 speaks of God collecting tears in a bottle — a vivid image of God's care for the weeping psalmist.
Psalm 116:8 thanks God for delivering from tears — a later response to the kind of weeping in Psalm 6.
Psalm 3:4 echoes crying to God and being answered — both psalms express confidence that God hears.
Psalm 145:18 assures the LORD is near to all who call — reinforcing confidence that God hears weeping.
Psalm 139:19 also calls for the wicked to depart, though with 'men of bloodshed' — a similar theme of separation.
Isaiah 30:19 promises God hears the cry of His people and answers — a prophetic echo of the same comfort.
Isaiah 38:5 explicitly says God heard Hezekiah's prayer and saw his tears — a direct parallel to God hearing weeping.
Matthew 7:23 has Jesus saying 'depart from me, you who practice lawlessness,' echoing this psalm's judgment on evildoers.
Matthew 25:41 uses 'depart from me' for the accursed, linking this psalm's call to final judgment.
In Luke 13:27, Jesus directly quotes this phrase, applying it to those He does not know — a stark judgment warning.
Hebrews 5:7 describes Jesus offering prayers with tears and being heard — a typological fulfillment of the psalmist's experience.
Lamentations 3:56 echoes the same plea for God to hear a cry, reinforcing the theme of divine response to lament.