Psalm 71:20
Thou, which hast shewed me great and sore troubles, shalt quicken me again, and shalt bring me up again from the depths of the earth.
Cross-references
Psalm 16:10 expresses a similar hope: God will not abandon the soul to Sheol, reinforcing the promise of being brought up from the depths.
Psalm 40:1-3 describes being lifted from a pit, paralleling the psalmist's hope of being brought up from the depths in Psalm 71:20.
Psalm 40:2 describes being drawn up from the pit of destruction, directly paralleling the psalmist's confidence in being revived from the depths.
Psalm 66:10-12 recounts God testing and then bringing to abundance, mirroring the pattern of troubles followed by restoration in Psalm 71:20.
Psalm 80:18 pleads 'give us life', directly paralleling the psalmist's request for revival — both cry for restoration.
Psalm 86:13 speaks of deliverance from the depths of Sheol, matching the psalmist's hope of being brought up from the earth's depths.
Psalm 88:6-18 describes being in the lowest pit without hope, contrasting with Psalm 71:20's confident expectation of restoration from the depths.
Psalm 30:3 directly parallels being brought up from Sheol, reinforcing the theme of revival from the depths.
Psalm 119:25 pleads for revival from the dust, a direct parallel to being brought up from the depths.
In Psalm 138:7, the same theme of God preserving life amidst trouble echoes the psalmist's confidence in revival after calamities.
Isaiah 26:19 promises resurrection of the dead, a clear parallel to the psalmist's hope of being brought up from the depths.
Acts 2:24 applies this resurrection language to Jesus, whom God raised up, fulfilling the psalmist's confidence in being brought up from death.
Hosea 6:2 uses the same 'revive' and 'raise up' language for Israel's restoration, echoing the psalmist's hope of being brought up from the depths.
Jonah 2:6 describes being brought up from the pit, a direct parallel to the psalmist's confidence that God will bring him up from the depths.
Isaiah 38:16 echoes the plea for restoration after affliction — Hezekiah's prayer parallels the psalmist's hope for revival.
Colossians 2:13 describes being made alive with Christ — the spiritual reality behind the psalmist's hope of revival.
Mark 16:6 announces Jesus' resurrection — the ultimate fulfillment of being brought up from the depths.
Hosea 13:14 asks about ransoming from Sheol — echoes the psalmist's hope of being brought up from the depths.
Ezekiel 37:13 repeats the promise of raising from graves, reinforcing the national resurrection theme that parallels the psalmist's personal hope.
Ezekiel 37:12 promises God will open graves and raise His people, using resurrection imagery similar to the psalmist's being brought up from the depths.
Isaiah 38:17 recounts Hezekiah's deliverance from the pit of destruction, a personal rescue that mirrors the psalmist's hope of revival.
Revelation 7:14 describes saints coming out of great tribulation, a parallel to being brought up from the depths — eschatological revival.
In 2 Corinthians 11:23-31, Paul lists his many sufferings, directly paralleling the psalmist's 'many troubles and calamities'.