Acts 14:11
And when the people saw what Paul had done, they lifted up their voices, saying in the speech of Lycaonia, The gods are come down to us in the likeness of men.
Cross-reference
Acts 12:22 records a similar acclamation of a human as divine — Herod is called a god, but here it leads to judgment while Paul rejects it.
In Acts 28:6, the Maltese also conclude Paul is a god after a miracle — a direct parallel to the Lystrans' reaction here.
In Acts 3:12, Peter similarly responds to crowd amazement after a healing, redirecting glory from himself — parallel to how Paul will reject worship here.
Acts 10:25 shows Cornelius worshiping Peter, who refuses it — a direct parallel to the deification Paul rejects here.
In Acts 8:10, Simon is hailed as 'the Great Power of God' — a parallel misattribution of divinity to a human.
2 Corinthians 4:5 states apostles do not proclaim themselves but Christ — directly contrasting the crowd's attempt to worship them as gods.
Revelation 19:10 shows John rebuked for worshiping an angel — parallel to the crowd's mistaken worship of apostles, both redirecting to God.