Psalm 80:7
Turn us again, O God of hosts, and cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved.
Cross-reference
Psalm 80:19 repeats the same refrain, closing the psalm with the same plea for restoration.
Psalm 80:3 is the identical refrain 'Restore us...let your face shine', repeated here for emphasis.
Psalm 4:6 asks God to lift up the light of his face — a similar prayer for divine favor, echoing this request.
Psalm 119:135 repeats 'Make your face shine upon your servant' — an exact phrase linking personal devotion to this communal plea.
Psalm 85:4 opens with 'Restore us again' — the same verb and plea for national restoration found here.
Psalm 67:1 echoes 'make his face shine upon us' — a blessing formula that matches this prayer for God's favor.
Psalm 31:16 uses the same plea 'make your face shine' and 'save me' — a direct parallel to this cry for restoration.
In Psalm 51:10, David prays for a clean heart — a personal parallel to the national plea for restoration here.
Isaiah 30:15 says salvation comes through returning and rest — echoing the restoration plea here.
Jeremiah 4:14 calls for washing the heart to be saved — a direct parallel to the plea 'that we may be saved'.
Numbers 6:25 is the priestly blessing 'the Lord make his face shine' — the exact phrase used here in the plea for salvation.
Lamentations 5:21 pleads 'Restore us to yourself, O LORD' — a nearly identical cry for national restoration after judgment.
Daniel 9:17 asks God to 'make your face shine upon your sanctuary' — the same phrase applied to the desolate temple.
Luke 1:16 describes John turning Israel to God — answering the plea for restoration in this verse.
Jeremiah 31:18 records Ephraim's prayer 'bring me back that I may be restored' — a similar cry for restoration from exile.
Mark 4:12 warns of those who do not turn and be forgiven — the opposite outcome of the restoration prayed for here.
2 Timothy 2:25 says God grants repentance — the divine action needed for the restoration requested here.