Psalm 66:1
Make a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands:
Cross-references
Psalm 81:1 repeats the call to shout joyfully to God our strength — reinforcing the same imperative.
Psalm 95:1 echoes the invitation to shout joyfully to the LORD — a parallel call to worship.
Psalm 95:2 adds thanksgiving to the shout of joy — expanding the worship response called for here.
In Psalm 96:1, the same universal call to sing to the Lord, all the earth, echoes this shout of joy.
Psalm 98:4 uses nearly identical wording: 'Shout joyfully to the LORD, all the earth' — a direct parallel.
Psalm 100:1 is identical: 'Shout joyfully to the LORD, all the earth' — the same command.
Psalm 117:1 extends the call to all nations and peoples, mirroring the universal scope of this shout.
Psalm 150:6 commands everything that breathes to praise the Lord, a fitting climax to the universal call here.
Psalm 96:7 echoes the universal call to praise, addressing 'all you families of nations' — expanding the audience of Psalm 66:1's 'all the earth'.
Psalm 148:11 lists specific groups (kings, nations, princes) called to praise — a detailed expansion of the universal summons in Psalm 66:1.
Psalm 117:2 provides the reason for praise — God's steadfast love and faithfulness — grounding the command here.
1 Chronicles 16:23 repeats 'Sing to the Lord, all the earth,' closely paralleling this call to shout joyfully.
1 Chronicles 16:28 calls families of nations to ascribe glory to God, reinforcing the universal worship theme.
1 Chronicles 15:28 describes Israel shouting as they bring the ark — a historical example of the joyful shouting commanded here.
1 Chronicles 16:24 expands the call to declare God's glory among the nations, specifying the content of praise.