Psalm 80:4

O Lord God of hosts, how long wilt thou be angry against the prayer of thy people?

Cross-reference

Psalm 74:1 Parallel

Psalm 74:1 asks why God's anger smokes against His people — nearly identical to the complaint in Psalm 80:4.

Psalm 85:5 Parallel

Psalm 85:5 echoes the same question of God's prolonged anger, reinforcing the lament of unanswered prayer.

Psalm 13:1 Parallel

Psalm 13:1 asks 'How long?' with the same sense of divine abandonment and hidden face.

Psalm 22:2 Parallel

Psalm 22:2 cries day and night without answer, mirroring the experience of unheeded prayer.

Psalm 79:5 Parallel

Psalm 79:5 asks 'How long will you be angry?' using nearly identical language about God's enduring wrath.

Isaiah 58:3 Parallel

Isaiah 58:3 directly voices the same complaint: 'Why have we fasted and you see it not?' — identical lament over unanswered devotion.

Isaiah 58:6-9 contrasts by showing that true fasting and justice remove the barrier to answered prayer, addressing the root of God's anger.

Lamentations 3:44 says God wraps Himself in a cloud so no prayer passes through — a vivid parallel to the blocked prayers in Psalm 80:4.

Job 30:20 Parallel

Job 30:20 describes crying out with no answer, directly paralleling the frustration of prayers met with silence.

Deuteronomy 28:20 Historical context

Deuteronomy 28:20 lists curses as a result of forsaking God, providing a covenantal backdrop for the anger lamented in Psalm 80:4.

Deuteronomy 29:20 Historical context

Deuteronomy 29:20 describes God's anger smoking against covenant breakers, a specific cause for the general lament in Psalm 80:4.