Acts 4:12
Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.
Cross-references
In Acts 10:43, Peter testifies that everyone who believes receives forgiveness through his name — the same exclusive salvation.
Acts 16:31 states that believing in the Lord Jesus brings salvation, reinforcing the exclusive salvation through his name.
Acts 13:23 identifies Jesus as the promised Savior from David's line, directly supporting the exclusive salvation through his name.
Acts 2:36 declares Jesus as Lord and Messiah, the foundation for the exclusive salvation through his name in Acts 4:12.
In Revelation 20:15, the lake of fire for those not in the book of life underscores the eternal consequence of rejecting the only name.
In Revelation 7:10, salvation is ascribed to God and the Lamb — a direct affirmation that salvation belongs to Jesus alone.
In Revelation 7:9, the multitude from every nation shows the universal scope of the salvation declared in Acts 4:12.
In 1 John 5:12, having the Son equals life, not having him equals no life — mirrors the exclusivity of Acts 4:12.
In 1 John 5:11, eternal life is in the Son — this directly supports that salvation is found in no one else.
In Hebrews 12:25, refusing the one who speaks echoes the danger of rejecting God's final revelation in Christ.
In Hebrews 2:3, ignoring such a great salvation warns of the consequence of rejecting the only name — complements the exclusivity.
In 1 Timothy 2:6, Christ's ransom for all explains the means by which this exclusive salvation is accomplished.
In 1 Timothy 2:5, the one mediator between God and humanity reinforces the exclusive role of Christ in salvation — no other name.
In 1 Corinthians 3:11, Christ is the only foundation — paralleling the exclusive source of salvation.
In John 14:6, Jesus is the only way to the Father — reinforcing that no other name brings salvation.
In John 3:36, belief in the Son yields eternal life — the same exclusive condition for salvation.
In Mark 16:16, belief and baptism bring salvation — directly echoing the necessity of faith in Jesus' name.
In Matthew 1:21, Jesus' name means salvation — he saves his people from sins, grounding the exclusive name here.
Hosea 13:4 declares God alone is Savior, echoing the exclusive salvation theme — no other name saves.
Exodus 15:2 declares 'the LORD is my salvation' — a clear OT parallel that God alone saves, echoed here in Jesus.
Leviticus 16:17 shows the high priest alone making atonement — typology of exclusive access through one mediator.
1 John 5:13 says believers in Jesus' name have eternal life — same theme as Acts 4:12's exclusive salvation through that name.
Psalm 3:8 says 'salvation belongs to the LORD' — a direct OT declaration of exclusive salvation, echoed in Acts.
Isaiah 28:16 prophesies a cornerstone foundation for those who believe — the exclusive basis for salvation fulfilled in Jesus.
1 John 2:12 says sins are forgiven on account of Jesus' name — directly parallel to Acts 4:12's 'salvation in no other name'.
Isaiah 43:11 says 'besides me there is no savior' — a direct OT statement of exclusive salvation, applied to Christ here.
Hebrews 5:9 says Jesus became the source of eternal salvation for all who obey him — parallel to 'no other name' for salvation in Acts 4:12.
John 8:24 warns that without believing Jesus is 'I am,' one dies in sins — directly parallel to exclusive salvation through His name.
Ephesians 1:21 declares Christ exalted above every name, reinforcing that no other name brings salvation as in Acts 4:12.
Galatians 2:16 teaches justification by faith in Christ, not works — directly supporting exclusive salvation through Jesus' name.
Luke 24:46 foretells Christ's suffering and resurrection — the necessary basis for the salvation offered through His name in Acts.
John 4:42 calls Jesus 'Savior of the world,' directly affirming the name through whom salvation comes — parallel to Acts' no other name.
John 6:68 asks 'to whom shall we go?' and declares Jesus has words of eternal life — exclusive source of salvation, just as Acts states.
1 Peter 2:7 contrasts believers who find Christ precious with those who reject him — echoing the exclusive salvation in Acts 4:12.
Jonah 2:9 says 'Salvation belongs to the Lord,' affirming that salvation originates from God, matching Acts' exclusive claim.
Numbers 35:32 forbids accepting ransom for the manslayer — illustrating no alternative deliverance, paralleling no other name.