Acts 13:30
But God raised him from the dead:
Cross-reference
Acts 13:37 contrasts Jesus, whom God raised from decay, with David — confirming the unique resurrection mentioned here.
Acts 2:24 also says 'God raised him up' — a parallel proclamation that adds 'freeing him from the agony of death' to the resurrection account.
In Acts 2:32, Peter also proclaims God raised Jesus and we are witnesses — a parallel resurrection testimony.
Acts 3:15 directly states God raised Jesus from the dead, echoing the same core proclamation.
Acts 3:26 ties raising Jesus to sending Him as a blessing — expanding the purpose of the resurrection.
Acts 4:10 names Jesus as the one God raised, applying the resurrection to Peter’s healing miracle.
Acts 5:30 repeats that God raised Jesus whom they killed by hanging on a tree — identical creed.
Acts 5:31 moves from resurrection to exaltation at God’s right hand — the next step after being raised.
Acts 10:40 specifies God raised Jesus on the third day and caused Him to be seen — adding detail.
Acts 17:31 uses the resurrection as proof of Jesus’ appointed role as future judge of the world.
Acts 26:8 asks why it’s incredible that God raises the dead — defending the same resurrection proclaimed here.
Hebrews 13:20 echoes the same truth — God brought up the great Shepherd from the dead, the resurrection declared here.
Matthew 28:6 reports the empty tomb and angelic announcement that Jesus has risen — the event itself.
John 10:17 reveals Jesus’ authority to take up His life again — the very power behind the resurrection stated here.
John 2:19 records Jesus predicting He would raise the temple in three days — the same resurrection event proclaimed here.
1 Corinthians 15:4 states Christ was raised on the third day — the very gospel core proclaimed in this verse.
Romans 4:24 ties faith to the same God who raised Jesus — the resurrection referenced here is the basis for belief.
1 Corinthians 15:15 stakes the apostles’ credibility on God raising Christ — the same truth at the center of this sermon.