Psalm 63:7
Because thou hast been my help, therefore in the shadow of thy wings will I rejoice.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 5:11, those who trust in God rejoice because He defends them—same rejoicing in God's protection as here.
In Psalm 21:1, the king rejoices in God's strength and salvation—parallel to rejoicing under God's wings here.
In Psalm 54:4, David declares God is his helper—the same theme of divine help as here.
In Psalm 57:1, David uses the exact same 'shadow of Your wings' imagery for refuge—direct parallel.
In Psalm 61:4, David trusts in the shelter of God's wings—same metaphor for divine protection as here.
Psalm 17:8 repeats 'hide me in the shadow of your wings' — the same plea for divine shelter as the psalmist's song here.
Psalm 36:7 also speaks of taking refuge in the shadow of your wings — reinforcing the theme of God's protective love.
Ruth 2:12 uses the identical 'under whose wings you have come to take refuge' — the same shelter imagery for God's protection.
Matthew 23:37 uses the same 'gathers her chicks under her wings' image — Jesus applies the shelter metaphor to his longing for Jerusalem.
Hebrews 13:6 declares 'The Lord is my helper' — directly echoing the psalmist's confidence in God as help.
In 1 Samuel 17:37, David recalls God's past deliverance from lion and bear—same confidence in God's help as here.
In 2 Corinthians 1:10, Paul echoes the same confidence in God's deliverance — the God who helps is the one who delivers from deadly peril.