Psalm 78:56
Yet they tempted and provoked the most high God, and kept not his testimonies:
Cross-reference
Psalm 78:40 also describes Israel provoking God in the wilderness, the same rebellion as verse 56.
Psalm 78:41 continues the theme — Israel turned back and tempted God, matching the provocation in verse 56.
Psalm 95:9 recalls the same wilderness testing, emphasizing that despite seeing God's works, they still tested Him.
Deuteronomy 31:16-20 predicts Israel's rebellion and provoking God, exactly the pattern seen in Psalm 78:56.
Deuteronomy 32:15-21 describes Israel forsaking God and provoking His anger, parallel to Psalm 78:56.
Judges 2:11 records Israel doing evil and serving Baalim, the same rebellion echoed in Psalm 78:56.
Judges 2:12 describes Israel abandoning God for other gods, directly echoing the rebellion and testing in Psalm 78:56.
2 Kings 17:7-23 recounts Israel's persistent rebellion and idolatry, mirroring the testing and disobedience in Psalm 78:56.
Nehemiah 9:26 explicitly states Israel's disobedience and rejection of God's law, directly paralleling the rebellion in Psalm 78:56.
Ezekiel 16:15-26 depicts Israel's unfaithfulness and idolatry as harlotry, strongly echoing the testing and rebellion in Psalm 78:56.
Hebrews 3:8 warns against hardening hearts like the rebellion, citing the same testing in the wilderness.
Exodus 17:2 records Israel testing the LORD at Massah, a specific instance of the testing mentioned in Psalm 78:56.
1 Corinthians 10:9 warns against testing Christ, directly referencing the wilderness events of Psalm 78:56.
Acts 5:9 shows testing the Spirit, a New Testament parallel to testing God in the wilderness.
Matthew 4:7 quotes the command not to test God, contrasting with Israel's testing in Psalm 78:56.
Malachi 3:15 shows the arrogant testing God and escaping, a later reflection of the same sin.
Isaiah 63:10 describes their rebellion as grieving the Holy Spirit, deepening the consequence of testing God.
2 Kings 17:11 describes Israel's wicked practices provoking God, directly paralleling the testing and rebellion in Psalm 78:56.
1 Kings 14:9 condemns Jeroboam's idolatry and provoking God, a specific example of the rebellion in Psalm 78:56.
1 Samuel 8:8 summarizes Israel's pattern of forsaking God since Egypt, directly matching the rebellion in Psalm 78:56.
Exodus 23:21 warns against rebellion, the very sin Israel commits in Psalm 78:56—a command they violated.
Jeremiah 44:23 links disobedience to disaster, echoing the failure to keep testimonies in Psalm 78:56.