Psalm 94:18
When I said, My foot slippeth; thy mercy, O Lord, held me up.
Cross-reference
In Psalm 37:24, though he falls, the LORD holds his hand — directly parallel to God holding up the psalmist when his foot slips.
In Psalm 38:16, the same 'foot slipping' imagery appears as a fear of enemies' mockery, echoing the vulnerability and plea for God's support.
In Psalm 119:116, the psalmist asks God to 'uphold me' according to His promise, paralleling the theme of divine support when slipping.
In Psalm 119:117, the plea 'Hold me up' directly parallels the assurance in Psalm 94:18 that God's love held the psalmist up.
In Psalm 121:3, God promises to keep your foot from slipping, directly echoing the slipping foot and God's sustaining care.
Psalm 145:14 generalizes the personal experience: God upholds all who are falling, just as He held up the psalmist when his foot slipped.
Psalm 41:12 says God upheld the psalmist because of integrity—same concept of divine support, though with a condition.
Psalm 56:13 explicitly thanks God for keeping feet from falling—direct parallel to the slipping foot being held up.
Psalm 63:8 says God's right hand upholds the psalmist—same image of God's sustaining support.
Psalm 66:9 says God has not let our feet slip—identical metaphor of God preventing stumbling.
Psalm 73:2 describes feet nearly slipping—same imagery of instability, though there the psalmist later finds resolution in the sanctuary.
Psalm 116:8 thanks God for delivering feet from stumbling—direct parallel to being held up when slipping.
In Psalm 17:5, the psalmist says his feet have not slipped — contrasting with God holding up the slipping foot in Psalm 94:18.
In Psalm 37:23, the LORD establishes a man's steps — similar to God holding up the slipping foot in Psalm 94:18.
In Isaiah 41:10, God promises to uphold with His righteous right hand, directly paralleling the assurance of being held up by God's steadfast love.
In 1 Samuel 2:9, Hannah's song says God guards the feet of his faithful ones, paralleling the theme of God preventing the foot from slipping.
In 2 Samuel 22:37, David declares his feet did not slip because God gave him a wide place, directly paralleling the slipping foot and God's support.
Job 12:5 uses the same 'foot slipping' image but from the perspective of the comfortable despising those who stumble, contrasting with God's steadfast love here.