Acts 2:14
But Peter, standing up with the eleven, lifted up his voice, and said unto them, Ye men of Judea, and all ye that dwell at Jerusalem, be this known unto you, and hearken to my words:
Cross-references
Acts 2:22 continues Peter's speech, presenting Jesus' miracles as evidence to the crowd—building on his opening address.
Acts 1:26 shows Matthias was chosen to replace Judas, completing the twelve apostles that Peter stands with here.
Acts 1:13 lists the eleven apostles with whom Peter stands — the same group from the upper room.
Acts 28:28 echoes 'let it be known' but shifts audience from Jews to Gentiles — a contrast in mission direction.
Acts 13:38 uses the same 'let it be known to you' opening in Paul's sermon — a parallel rhetorical formula for proclaiming forgiveness.
In Matthew 16:19, Jesus promises Peter the keys—here at Pentecost, Peter uses that authority by preaching the first gospel sermon.
Galatians 2:8 confirms Peter's apostolic call to the circumcised — exactly the role he fulfills at Pentecost.
Isaiah 40:9 calls the herald to lift up voice with strength to proclaim good news—paralleling Peter's bold proclamation.