Psalm 91:2

I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust.

Cross-reference

Psalm 91:9 Parallel

Psalm 91:9 repeats the refuge theme from verse 2, calling God 'my refuge' — a direct parallel within the same psalm.

Psalm 18:2 Parallel

Psalm 18:2 calls God 'my fortress' and 'my refuge' — identical imagery to the main verse's refuge and fortress.

Psalm 46:1 Parallel

In Psalm 46:1, the same refuge and fortress imagery appears — God is called 'our refuge and strength'.

Psalm 62:5-8 uses the same refuge/fortress/trust imagery—a parallel declaration of God as refuge and salvation.

Psalm 71:3 Parallel

Psalm 71:3 echoes the rock, refuge, and fortress language — 'Be to me a rock of refuge... my rock and my fortress'.

Psalm 142:5 Parallel

Psalm 142:5 directly says 'You are my refuge' — the same declaration of trust in God as a safe place.

Psalm 9:9 Parallel

Psalm 9:9 calls the LORD a 'stronghold for the oppressed' — a direct parallel to the refuge and fortress imagery here.

Psalm 21:7 Parallel

Psalm 21:7 says the king trusts in the LORD and will not be moved — a strong thematic parallel to trusting God as secure refuge.

Psalm 119:114 uses the same 'hiding place' and 'shield' imagery, reinforcing God as refuge and the role of His word in trust.

Psalm 140:6 Parallel

Psalm 140:6 echoes the personal declaration 'Thou art my God', but in a plea for deliverance rather than a statement of trust.

In Hebrews 11:16, God is not ashamed to be called their God—echoing the psalmist's bold declaration of 'my God' in trust.

In Genesis 17:7, God promises to be God to Abraham's descendants—the same covenantal relationship the psalmist claims in declaring 'my God'.

Jeremiah 31:1 promises God will be Israel's God—the same covenantal relationship the psalmist claims personally as 'my God'.

Isaiah 26:4 Parallel

Isaiah 26:4 calls to trust in the LORD as an everlasting rock—the same refuge imagery as the psalmist's fortress and trust.

Isaiah 26:3 Parallel

Isaiah 26:3 promises peace to those who trust in God—directly connecting to the psalmist's trust declaration here.

Isaiah 12:2 Parallel

Isaiah 12:2 declares God as salvation and trust—the same personal trust and refuge theme as here.

Proverbs 18:10 says 'The name of the LORD is a strong tower' — a fortress metaphor matching the refuge theme of Psalm 91:2.

Deuteronomy 33:27-29 calls God 'your dwelling place' and 'shield of your help' — strong refuge imagery parallel to Psalm 91:2.

In Deuteronomy 26:17-19, Israel declares the LORD as their God—mirroring the psalmist's personal declaration of God as 'my God' here.

Proverbs 30:5 affirms God as a shield to those who trust, directly paralleling the refuge and trust theme.

2 Samuel 22:2 uses nearly identical language — 'my rock and my fortress' — echoing the same trust in God as refuge.

Jeremiah 16:19 calls God 'my strength, fortress, and refuge', closely mirroring the refuge/fortress language.

Nahum 1:7 Parallel

Nahum 1:7 calls God 'a strong hold in the day of trouble' for those who trust, directly parallel.

Hebrews 2:13 quotes 'I will put my trust in him', directly echoing the trust declaration of Psalm 91:2.