Psalm 85:4
Turn us, O God of our salvation, and cause thine anger toward us to cease.
Cross-references
Psalm 78:38 describes God restraining his anger and not stirring up all his wrath — a direct parallel to the request to put away indignation.
Psalm 80:3 uses the same plea 'Restore us' and 'let your face shine' — a direct parallel cry for restoration.
Psalm 80:7 repeats the refrain 'Restore us, O God of hosts' — identical petition for restoration.
Psalm 80:19 again echoes 'Restore us, O LORD God of hosts' — the same refrain from the communal lament.
Psalm 60:1 cries 'you have been angry; oh, restore us!' — almost identical plea for restoration after God's anger.
Psalm 126:4 asks 'Restore our fortunes, O LORD' — a direct parallel to the plea for restoration here.
Lamentations 5:21 directly prays 'Restore us to yourself, O LORD' — a nearly identical request for renewal.
Daniel 9:16 prays for God's anger to turn away from Jerusalem — a very similar plea for restoration from divine wrath.
In Micah 7:18-20, God pardons iniquity and does not retain anger — directly echoing the plea for God to put away indignation here.
In Amos 7:5, the prophet similarly pleads for God to stop judgment, echoing this cry for restoration.
Jeremiah 31:18 records Ephraim's plea 'bring me back that I may be restored' — a similar cry for restoration after discipline.