Psalm 62:7

In God is my salvation and my glory: the rock of my strength, and my refuge, is in God.

Cross-reference

Psalm 3:3 Parallel

In Psalm 3:3, David calls God 'my glory'—the same phrase and concept as in Psalm 62:7, where God is the psalmist's glory.

Psalm 18:2 Parallel

In Psalm 18:2, God is called rock, strength, and salvation—identical metaphors to the rock of strength and refuge in Psalm 62:7.

Psalm 18:46 Parallel

In Psalm 18:46, God is praised as 'my Rock' and 'God of my salvation'—directly matching the rock and salvation themes of Psalm 62:7.

Psalm 95:1 Parallel

In Psalm 95:1, God is called 'the Rock of our salvation'—the same rock and salvation imagery as in Psalm 62:7.

Psalm 94:22 Parallel

In Psalm 94:22, God is called 'the rock of my refuge'—nearly identical to the rock of strength and refuge in Psalm 62:7.

Psalm 89:26 Allusion

Psalm 89:26 uses the same 'Rock of my salvation' title for God, linking the psalmist's cry to the Davidic covenant context.

Psalm 142:5 Parallel

Psalm 142:5 echoes the refuge theme — God is the psalmist's refuge and portion, reinforcing the same trust in distress.

Psalm 140:7 Parallel

Psalm 140:7 calls God 'the strength of my salvation' — a close parallel to the rock and refuge imagery, with added battle context.

Psalm 71:7 Parallel

Psalm 71:7 echoes the same refuge language — God is the strong refuge of the psalmist, reinforcing the theme of divine protection.

Psalm 61:4 Parallel

Psalm 61:4 asks to take refuge under God's wings—a different image but the same core idea of God as refuge.

Psalm 46:1 Parallel

Psalm 46:1 declares God 'our refuge and strength'—the same refuge theme, now applied to the community.

Psalm 42:9 Parallel

Psalm 42:9 calls God 'my rock' in a lament—the same title of trust, though from a distressed perspective.

Psalm 35:3 Parallel

Psalm 35:3 has God saying 'I am your salvation'—a direct divine claim that matches David's declaration.

Psalm 31:2 Parallel

Psalm 31:2 asks God to be a 'rock of refuge'—the same rock-and-refuge imagery David uses for his trust.

Psalm 21:5 Parallel

Psalm 21:5 pairs 'glory' and 'salvation' just as Psalm 62:7 does, linking the king's honor to God's deliverance.

Psalm 88:1 Contrast

Psalm 88:1 also calls God 'God of my salvation' — but from a lament, contrasting with the confident trust in Psalm 62:7.

Psalm 21:1 Parallel

Psalm 21:1 speaks of the king rejoicing in God's salvation—a similar theme but applied to a royal figure.

Isaiah 26:4 Parallel

In Isaiah 26:4, the Lord is called 'everlasting strength'—paralleling the rock of strength and refuge in Psalm 62:7.

Jeremiah 3:23 affirms that salvation is in the LORD alone, directly reinforcing the same truth from Psalm 62:7 that God is salvation.

Jeremiah 9:23 warns against glorying in human wisdom, might, or riches — a direct contrast to Psalm 62:7's glory in God alone.

Jeremiah 9:24 says to glory in knowing the LORD, perfectly aligning with Psalm 62:7's 'my glory' being in God.

In 1 Corinthians 1:31, boasting in the Lord directly parallels the psalmist's declaration that his glory is in God.

Exodus 15:2 Allusion

Exodus 15:2 uses the same 'my salvation' and 'my God' language, echoing the song of Moses as a foundation for personal trust.

Jeremiah 16:19 uses the same triad of strength, stronghold, and refuge — a direct parallel to the rock and refuge imagery in Psalm 62:7.

In 1 Corinthians 1:30, Christ is made our righteousness and redemption—echoing the theme that God is our salvation and glory.

In Galatians 6:14, Paul boasts only in the cross—a specific focus on Christ as the source of glory, similar to glorying in God.