Psalm 94:7

Yet they say, The Lord shall not see, neither shall the God of Jacob regard it.

Cross-reference

Psalm 10:11-13 has the wicked saying God has forgotten and will never see — identical to the claim in this verse.

Psalm 59:7 Parallel

Psalm 59:7 has the wicked asking 'who hears?' — similar to saying God does not see or perceive.

Psalm 50:21 Parallel

Psalm 50:21 reveals that God's silence led the wicked to think He was like them, mirroring the false assumption in Psalm 94:7.

Psalm 64:5 Parallel

Psalm 64:5 shows the wicked asking 'Who can see them?' — the same denial of God's sight found in Psalm 94:7.

Psalm 73:11 Parallel

Psalm 73:11 has the wicked questioning God's knowledge, directly paralleling the claim in Psalm 94:7 that God does not see.

Psalm 139:11 imagines darkness hiding one from God, contrasting the wicked's belief in Psalm 94:7 that God cannot see.

Ezekiel 9:9 Parallel

Ezekiel 9:9 repeats the same accusation: 'The LORD does not see' — linking the people's sin to their belief that God is blind.

Job 22:13 Parallel

In Job 22:13, Eliphaz quotes the same skeptical question about God's knowledge, echoing the wicked's denial of divine awareness.

Ezekiel 8:12 directly quotes the elders saying 'The LORD does not see us' — an exact parallel to the wicked's claim in Psalm 94:7.

Isaiah 29:15 condemns those who hide plans in darkness, thinking 'Who sees us?' — the same denial of God's sight as in Psalm 94:7.

1 Samuel 2:3 directly counters the claim in Psalm 94:7 by affirming that the Lord knows and weighs deeds.

Isaiah 47:10 records Babylon saying 'No one sees me,' the same arrogant denial of God's sight as in Psalm 94:7.

Job 24:15 Parallel

Job 24:15 describes an adulterer who thinks no eye sees him, echoing the wicked's belief that God does not see.

Deuteronomy 29:19 warns against self-deception, thinking one is safe while persisting in sin — similar to the wicked's false security in Psalm 94:7.

Zephaniah 1:12 describes complacent people who think 'The LORD will do nothing' — a similar denial of God's active justice.

Luke 18:4 Parallel

Luke 18:4 reveals the unjust judge who 'does not fear God' — mirroring the wicked's attitude that God does not see or act.

Acts 5:3 Parallel

Acts 5:3 shows Ananias lying to the Holy Spirit, thinking he could hide his sin — a New Testament example of the same folly.