Psalm 78:11
And forgat his works, and his wonders that he had shewed them.
Cross-references
Psalm 78:7 states the ideal of not forgetting God's deeds—contrasting with the forgetfulness here.
In Psalm 78:35, Israel briefly remembered God as their Rock — a momentary contrast to the forgetting earlier in the same psalm.
In Psalm 78:42, they did not remember His power or redemption — a restatement of the same forgetting from verse 11.
Psalm 106:13 says they soon forgot God's works, directly paralleling the forgetfulness of wonders.
Psalm 106:21 says they forgot God who saved them, matching the forgetfulness of wonders.
In Psalm 77:11, the psalmist resolves to remember God's wonders — the opposite response to the forgetting in Psalm 78:11.
In Deuteronomy 32:18, the same forgetting is described: Israel forgot the Rock who begot them, directly echoing the failure to remember God's works.
In Jeremiah 2:32, God laments that His people have forgotten Him 'days without number' — a parallel indictment of spiritual amnesia.
In Judges 8:34, Israel did not remember the LORD who delivered them — a direct parallel to forgetting His works and wonders.
In Nehemiah 9:17, Israel was not mindful of the wonders performed among them — the same failure to recall God's mighty acts.
Hosea 2:13 also describes Israel forgetting God, specifically burning offerings to Baals — the same sin of forgetting His works.
In Deuteronomy 7:18, Israel is commanded to remember what God did to Pharaoh — contrasting with the forgetting in Psalm 78:11.
In Isaiah 63:7, the prophet recounts God's steadfast love and goodness — the opposite of forgetting, a call to remember His deeds.
Hebrews 8:9 recalls Israel's failure to continue in God's covenant — a parallel to forgetting His works, though focused on covenant breaking.