Psalm 76:7
Thou, even thou, art to be feared: and who may stand in thy sight when once thou art angry?
Cross-reference
Psalm 90:11 echoes the same question about God's anger and fear — who truly grasps the power of His wrath?
Psalm 89:7 emphasizes God's fearsome nature in the assembly, reinforcing the call to fear God alone in Psalm 76:7.
In Psalm 9:3, enemies stumble and perish before God's presence — a specific instance of no one standing before His anger.
In Psalm 68:2, the wicked perish before God like wax before fire — illustrating the same inability to stand before His anger.
In Psalm 96:9, all the earth is called to tremble before the LORD — a direct call to the fear that is realized in His anger here.
Psalm 2:12 warns of God's quickly kindled wrath and urges refuge — complementing the question of who can stand before His anger.
In Psalm 96:4, the LORD is to be feared above all gods — a broader statement of His worthiness of fear, consistent with the terror of His anger.
In Psalm 80:16, they perish at the rebuke of God's face — a specific judgment that reflects the fear of His anger here.
Jeremiah 10:7-10 declares God as the true King to be feared, echoing the exclusive fear of God in Psalm 76:7.
Nahum 1:6 asks the same question — who can stand before God's indignation? — and adds imagery of fire and broken rocks.
Revelation 6:16 shows people hiding from God's wrath — confirming that no one can stand before it, just as Psalm 76:7 asks.
Revelation 6:17 directly echoes the question 'who can stand?' — the great day of wrath has come, answering the psalm's rhetorical question.
Revelation 14:7 commands fear God because judgment has come, directly echoing the fear of God in Psalm 76:7.
Revelation 15:4 asks 'Who will not fear you?' affirming that God alone is holy and to be feared, as in Psalm 76:7.
Hebrews 10:31 warns it is fearful to fall into the hands of the living God, directly reinforcing the terror of facing God's anger.
Jeremiah 10:10 declares that at God's wrath the earth quakes and nations cannot endure His indignation, directly paralleling the question of who can stand.
In Isaiah 2:19, people hide from the terror of the LORD when He rises — illustrating the inability to stand before His anger described here.
Jeremiah 4:26 depicts the land laid waste before the LORD's fierce anger, echoing the same terror of God's wrath that makes no one able to stand.
In 2 Chronicles 32:21, God's anger against Assyria is demonstrated as no one could stand before Him — the angel destroys the army, fulfilling the fear described here.
1 Samuel 6:20 asks the same question — who can stand before this holy God? — after the ark's judgment, echoing Psalm 76:7.
In Isaiah 8:13, the LORD is to be your fear and dread — a direct command to fear Him, which is the response to His anger here.
Matthew 10:28 teaches to fear God who can destroy soul and body, aligning with Psalm 76:7's call to fear God's anger.
Exodus 22:24 describes God's burning wrath against oppressors — an example of the anger that no one can stand against.
In Job 31:23, Job expresses the same terror of God's calamity and inability to face His majesty, echoing the fear of God's anger.
1 Corinthians 10:22 asks if we are stronger than God — a similar warning that no one can stand against His anger.
2 Corinthians 5:11 speaks of knowing the fear of the Lord to persuade others, connecting to the reverent fear of God but not specifically His wrath.
2 Kings 22:13 acknowledges the great wrath of the LORD kindled against disobedience — a situation where no one can stand before His anger.