Acts 22:24
The chief captain commanded him to be brought into the castle, and bade that he should be examined by scourging; that he might know wherefore they cried so against him.
Cross-reference
Acts 22:25-29 immediately follows: Paul reveals his Roman citizenship, stopping the scourging ordered here — a direct sequential continuation.
Acts 22:29 reveals Paul's Roman citizenship halts the flogging—the intended torture is prevented.
Acts 16:37 records Paul asserting his Roman citizenship after being beaten, just as he will in Acts 22:25-29 to avoid the scourging here.
Acts 21:31 describes the same riot when the crowd tried to kill Paul, leading to his arrest — the event that brings him to the chief captain here.
Acts 21:32 shows the chief captain intervening to rescue Paul from the mob, setting up his custody and the order to examine by scourging here.
Acts 23:10 records a similar moment when the chief captain again fears Paul will be torn apart and orders him taken into the castle — mirroring this command.
Acts 23:27 is the chief captain's later summary of this exact situation — he rescued Paul and intended to examine him, as described here.
Acts 21:33 is the immediate arrest—same commander binds Paul before ordering flogging here.
Acts 21:34 explains the commander's inability to learn truth due to uproar, prompting the flogging order.
Acts 16:23 continues the beating and imprisonment — parallel to the scourging and custody ordered here, both unjust treatments of Paul.
2 Corinthians 6:5 lists 'stripes' among Paul's sufferings—directly relating to the flogging ordered here.
2 Corinthians 11:25 records Paul 'beaten with rods'—the same Roman flogging ordered here.