Psalm 60:10
Wilt not thou, O God, which hadst cast us off? and thou, O God, which didst not go out with our armies?
Cross-references
Psalm 60:1 opens the same psalm with the same cry of rejection, forming an inclusio with verse 10.
Psalm 108:11 repeats Psalm 60:10 verbatim, as part of a later compilation.
Psalm 20:7 declares trust in God over chariots — opposite to the lament in Psalm 60:10 that God has rejected and does not go out with armies.
Psalm 89:38 laments God's rejection of His anointed king — a parallel complaint about God's abandonment, though focused on the Davidic covenant.
Psalm 74:1 asks why God has rejected His people forever — a similar lament of divine rejection, reinforcing the theme.
Psalm 44:9 uses nearly identical words to lament God's rejection and absence in battle — a direct parallel to this verse.
Deuteronomy 1:42 records God telling Israel not to fight because He is not with them, mirroring the situation in Psalm 60:10.
Isaiah 8:17 also speaks of God hiding his face from Israel, echoing the lament of rejection in Psalm 60:10.
1 Chronicles 10:1-14 recounts Saul's defeat and death because God rejected him — a historical example of God not going out with Israel's armies.
1 Samuel 4:11 adds the capture of the ark and death of Eli's sons — the ultimate sign of God's rejection in battle, echoing the psalm.
1 Samuel 4:10 describes Israel's great defeat despite the ark — directly illustrating the psalm's claim that God did not go out with the armies.
Joshua 7:12 explains God's absence due to sin leading to defeat, paralleling the implied cause in Psalm 60:10.
Deuteronomy 20:4 promises God goes with Israel to fight, the opposite of Psalm 60:10's complaint that He does not.
Exodus 11:4 describes God going out to judge Egypt — the opposite of the psalm's complaint that God does not go out with Israel's armies.
Jeremiah 33:24-26 quotes the accusation of rejection but affirms God will not reject His people, contrasting with Psalm 60:10's lament.
Joshua 10:42 describes God fighting for Israel in victory, contrasting with Psalm 60:10's lament of divine absence.
Isaiah 12:1 promises God's anger will turn away, contrasting with Psalm 60:10's present experience of rejection.