Psalm 91:6
Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness; nor for the destruction that wasteth at noonday.
Cross-reference
Psalm 91:3 already mentions 'deadly pestilence,' forming a direct parallel within the same psalm about God's protection.
Psalm 121:6 promises the sun will not strike by day, directly paralleling the 'destruction that wastes at noonday'.
2 Samuel 24:15 recounts a specific pestilence sent by God, illustrating the very plague from which Psalm 91:6 promises protection.
Deuteronomy 4:3 recalls the plague at Baal-peor, a historical instance of pestilence as judgment, paralleling the threat in Psalm 91:6.
2 Samuel 24:13 presents pestilence as one of three judgments offered to David, directly referencing the same kind of plague mentioned in Psalm 91:6.
1 Chronicles 21:12 similarly offers pestilence as a divine judgment, reinforcing the reality of the plague from which Psalm 91:6 promises deliverance.
Ezekiel 14:19 describes God sending pestilence as judgment, illustrating the very calamity from which Psalm 91:6 promises safety.
Exodus 12:29 recounts the Lord striking firstborn at midnight, a night destruction that contrasts with the promise of safety from pestilence in darkness.
Numbers 16:48 shows Aaron stopping a plague by standing between dead and living, a parallel deliverance from pestilence.
2 Kings 19:35 tells of the angel striking Assyrians at night, a judgment event contrasting with the psalm's assurance against night destruction.