Psalm 63:5
My soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness; and my mouth shall praise thee with joyful lips:
Cross-reference
Psalm 17:15 expresses satisfaction in seeing God's face, echoing the soul's satisfaction in Psalm 63:5.
Psalm 65:4 speaks of being satisfied with the goodness of God's house, a parallel to satisfaction in Psalm 63:5.
Psalm 71:23 has 'my lips will shout for joy' when singing praises, a very close parallel to the joyful lips of praise here.
In Psalm 34:8, 'taste and see that the Lord is good' directly parallels the satisfaction and praise in Psalm 63:5, both using sensory experience of God.
In Psalm 36:8, feasting on abundance and drinking from delights mirrors the rich food satisfaction and joyful praise in Psalm 63:5.
In Psalm 100:2, serving with gladness and singing parallels the joyful lips of praise in Psalm 63:5, both emphasizing joyful worship.
In Psalm 103:1, blessing the Lord with all one's soul parallels the soul's satisfaction and praise in Psalm 63:5, both calling the soul to worship.
In Psalm 103:5, God satisfies with good, directly echoing the satisfaction with rich food in Psalm 63:5, both celebrating God's provision.
In Psalm 119:103, the same taste metaphor describes delight in God's words — both express soul-satisfaction through sensory imagery.
Isaiah 25:6 depicts a feast of rich food, mirroring the satisfaction with fat and rich food that leads to praise here.
Ecclesiastes 1:8 declares that the eye and ear are never satisfied — contrasting sharply with the soul's full satisfaction in God here.
Isaiah 55:2 invites people to eat what is good and delight in rich food — the same imagery of spiritual satisfaction from God's provision.
Jeremiah 31:14 promises that God will feast souls with abundance and satisfy His people — directly parallel to the satisfaction described here.
Matthew 5:6 promises satisfaction to those who hunger for righteousness — a New Testament echo of the soul's satisfaction in God.
In John 4:32, Jesus uses the same food metaphor for spiritual satisfaction — His 'food' is doing the Father's will, echoing the soul's satisfaction in God.
In 1 Peter 2:3, the 'taste' of the Lord's goodness echoes the soul's satisfaction with rich food here — both use sensory metaphor for spiritual experience.