Psalm 64:7
But God shall shoot at them with an arrow; suddenly shall they be wounded.
Cross-reference
Psalm 64:4 describes enemies shooting secretly; verse 7 contrasts with God shooting suddenly in judgment.
Psalm 7:12 describes God bending his bow and readying his sword — the same divine weapon imagery as God shooting arrows in Psalm 64:7.
Psalm 7:13 continues the weapon imagery with fiery arrows — directly parallel to God's arrows in Psalm 64:7.
Psalm 18:14 depicts God sending arrows to scatter enemies — the same divine archery as in Psalm 64:7.
Psalm 73:19 echoes the sudden destruction of the wicked, matching God's sudden arrow in Psalm 64:7.
In Psalm 21:12, God prepares arrows against His enemies' faces — the same divine archery imagery of sudden judgment.
In Psalm 58:7, the wicked are cut off when God bends His bow — directly paralleling the arrow-shooting judgment here.
In Psalm 38:2, God's arrows pierce the psalmist himself — same arrow imagery but directed at the righteous, not enemies.
Psalm 139:19 expresses a wish for God to slay the wicked, echoing the same imprecatory desire for divine judgment.
Lamentations 3:13 uses the same arrow imagery for divine judgment, but from the sufferer's perspective.
Deuteronomy 32:23 has God spending arrows on the wicked — identical imagery to God shooting arrows in Psalm 64:7.
Isaiah 30:13 describes sudden collapse like a breach, similar to the sudden arrow strike in Psalm 64:7.
Proverbs 29:1 says the stubborn are suddenly destroyed, paralleling the sudden wound from God's arrow.
Proverbs 6:15 warns that calamity comes suddenly on the wicked, just as God's arrow strikes suddenly.
In 1 Kings 22:34, a random arrow strikes King Ahab fatally — a providential sudden blow like the divine arrow here.
Deuteronomy 32:42 describes God's arrows drunk with blood — the same divine weapon imagery as Psalm 64:7.
Job 6:4 laments God's arrows piercing him — the same arrow imagery as Psalm 64:7, but from a sufferer's perspective.
Lamentations 3:12 describes God bending his bow and making the speaker a target — the same arrow imagery as Psalm 64:7, but from a victim's viewpoint.