Psalm 89:39
Thou hast made void the covenant of thy servant: thou hast profaned his crown by casting it to the ground.
Cross-reference
Psalm 89:34-36 records God's oath to never break the Davidic covenant — directly contradicted by the renunciation in verse 39.
Psalm 89:44 continues the same lament: God cast the king's throne to the ground, echoing the defiled crown in verse 39.
Psalm 89:33 promises God will never betray his faithfulness — the exact opposite of the renounced covenant in this verse.
Psalm 132:10 prays that God not reject his anointed — contrasting the rejection and defiled crown here.
Psalm 74:20 pleads for God to regard his covenant — directly opposing the renunciation of the covenant described here.
Psalm 74:7 describes the sanctuary profaned and brought down, a parallel image of God's holy things being defiled.
Isaiah 43:28 says God will profane the princes of the sanctuary, directly paralleling the defiling of the king's crown in judgment.
Lamentations 5:16 uses the exact image of a fallen crown, lamenting lost honor due to sin — a direct echo of the defiled crown.
2 Chronicles 21:7 affirms God's faithfulness to the Davidic covenant despite appearances — the very covenant Psalm 89:39 laments as renounced.
Jeremiah 14:21 begs God not to break his covenant — a direct plea against the renunciation stated here.
Lamentations 2:2 describes God tearing down Judah's kingdom in dishonor — paralleling the defiled crown and broken covenant here.
2 Kings 11:12 shows a crown being placed on a king in honor, contrasting sharply with the crown defiled and cast down here.
In 2 Chronicles 23:11, a crown is placed on Joash in a restoration of the Davidic line — contrasting the defiled crown here.
Zechariah 11:10 depicts breaking a staff to revoke a covenant — echoing the renounced covenant here, though in a different prophetic context.