Psalm 66:14

Which my lips have uttered, and my mouth hath spoken, when I was in trouble.

Cross-reference

Psalm 56:12 Parallel

Psalm 56:12 parallels this exactly: David recalls his vows to God and promises thank offerings after deliverance.

In Genesis 28:20-22, Jacob makes a conditional vow in distress — mirroring the psalmist's vow made when in trouble.

In Genesis 35:3, Jacob fulfills his earlier vow by building an altar — a direct example of the vow-fulfillment pattern.

In Numbers 30:2, the law commands fulfilling vows to the Lord — the same obligation the psalmist acknowledges here.

In Judges 11:35, Jephthah laments his vow made in trouble, unable to retract it — exactly the situation described here of vows spoken in distress.

In Judges 11:36, Jephthah's daughter urges him to fulfill his vow, reinforcing the theme of keeping vows made to God.

In 1 Samuel 1:11, Hannah vows in distress for a son — a classic parallel to the psalmist's vow made in trouble.

In Deuteronomy 23:21, the law commands prompt payment of vows — reinforcing the psalmist's commitment to fulfill.

In Deuteronomy 23:23, the law emphasizes keeping what has passed your lips — directly echoing the psalmist's 'my lips uttered'.

Ecclesiastes 5:4 directly commands fulfilling vows made to God, reinforcing the obligation implied here.

Job 22:27 Parallel

Job 22:27 echoes the same pattern: prayer leads to answered prayer and fulfillment of vows made in distress.

In Judges 11:31, Jephthah makes a rash vow in battle — a parallel of a vow in distress, though with tragic consequences.