Psalm 80:8
Thou hast brought a vine out of Egypt: thou hast cast out the heathen, and planted it.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 80:15, the same psalm refers back to the vine God planted, reinforcing the image.
Psalm 44:2 parallels the same historical action: God drove out nations and planted Israel, directly echoing Psalm 80:8.
Psalm 78:55 describes God driving out nations and settling Israel, the same event as the vine being planted in Psalm 80:8.
In Psalm 105:44, God gives the lands of nations to Israel, paralleling the dispossession theme here.
In Psalm 111:6, God gives the inheritance of nations to his people, similar to the planting and dispossession here.
Matthew 21:33-41's parable of the vineyard tenants alludes to Israel as God's vineyard, building on the OT vine metaphor from Psalm 80:8.
Isaiah 5:1-7 develops the vine/vineyard metaphor for Israel — the same image used here of the vine brought from Egypt.
John 15:1-8 redefines the vine metaphor: Jesus is the true vine, contrasting with the failed vine of Israel in Psalm 80:8.
Isaiah 27:3 continues the vineyard metaphor, emphasizing God's care as keeper of the vine planted in Psalm 80:8.
Jeremiah 2:21 directly echoes God planting Israel as a choice vine, but laments its degeneration into a wild vine.
In Mark 12:1, Jesus' parable of the vineyard echoes God planting Israel as a vineyard — the same OT metaphor.
In Luke 20:9, Jesus' parable of the vineyard tenants directly alludes to God planting Israel as a vineyard.
In Jeremiah 45:4, God declares He will uproot what He planted — the vine brought from Egypt is now being plucked up.
In Jeremiah 12:10, the vineyard (Israel) is destroyed by shepherds — the same vine God planted from Egypt is now trampled.
In Jeremiah 11:17, God who planted Israel now pronounces judgment, echoing the vine's later fate in this psalm.
In Isaiah 5:7, Israel is called God's pleasant planting in a vineyard metaphor, directly parallel to the vine image.
In 2 Samuel 7:10, God promises to plant Israel in a secure place, using the same metaphor as this verse.
In Exodus 15:17, the same 'planting' language describes Israel's settlement in God's sanctuary, directly echoing this verse.
In Ezekiel 15:2, the vine's wood is questioned for its worth — the same vine imagery for Israel's uselessness.
Ezekiel 15:6 uses vine wood as a metaphor for Jerusalem's worthlessness, contrasting the fruitful planting in Psalm 80:8.
Ezekiel 19:10 laments Israel's princes using vine imagery of a fruitful vine planted by water, echoing Psalm 80:8's planting.
In Exodus 34:24, God promises to drive out nations before Israel, mirroring the 'drove out nations' action here.
In Luke 13:6, the fig tree planted in a vineyard parallels God's planting of Israel and expectation of fruit.
Ezekiel 17:6 describes a low spreading vine in an allegory of Israel's political situation, similar to the vine planted in Psalm 80:8.
Isaiah 27:2 uses the same vineyard metaphor for Israel, but in a future song of restoration, echoing the planting imagery.
In 1 Corinthians 3:9, Paul calls believers God's field — a similar agricultural metaphor for God's people.