Psalm 85:3
Thou hast taken away all thy wrath: thou hast turned thyself from the fierceness of thine anger.
Cross-references
In Exodus 32:11, Moses intercedes for Israel, pleading for God to turn from his burning anger — the same divine response described here.
Isaiah 12:1 explicitly says God's anger turned away — directly parallel to Psalm 85:3's withdrawal of wrath.
Isaiah 54:7-10 expands on God's momentary anger giving way to everlasting compassion — same turning from wrath.
In John 1:29, the Lamb of God takes away sin, which is the basis for God turning away his wrath as described here.
In Exodus 32:12, Moses directly asks God to turn from his burning anger — the very action Psalm 85:3 declares happened.
In Judges 3:8, God's anger is kindled against Israel — the opposite of the withdrawn wrath here.
Zephaniah 3:15 echoes this removal of wrath, declaring God has taken away judgments and cleared enemies — a parallel promise of divine deliverance.
In Deuteronomy 13:17, the condition for God to turn from his anger is purging evil — a parallel to the turning described here.
In Isaiah 27:4, God declares 'I have no wrath' — a parallel state of divine favor, though in a different context.
In Jeremiah 33:8, God promises to cleanse and forgive sin — the basis for turning away wrath as in this psalm.