Acts 5:30
The God of our fathers raised up Jesus, whom ye slew and hanged on a tree.
Cross-references
Acts 2:22-24 provides the full Pentecost sermon: God attested Jesus, you crucified him, and God raised him—identical themes to Acts 5:30.
Acts 2:22-24 provides the full Pentecost sermon: God attested Jesus, you crucified him, and God raised him—identical themes to Acts 5:30.
Acts 3:13-15 is an earlier speech where Peter makes the same accusation: they killed Jesus but God raised him, repeating the apostolic witness.
Acts 3:26 directly parallels God raising his servant Jesus to bless and turn from wickedness, reinforcing the same resurrection event.
In Acts 4:10, Peter earlier proclaims the same fact: Jesus was crucified and God raised him from the dead.
Acts 10:39 uses identical language: 'they slew and hanged on a tree,' reinforcing the historical fact of crucifixion.
Acts 13:33 explicitly states God raised Jesus, fulfilling the Psalm, a direct parallel to Peter's statement in Acts 5:30.
Acts 2:23 declares they crucified Jesus — identical to the accusation in Acts 5:30.
Acts 2:36 states they crucified Jesus — directly parallel to Acts 5:30's claim.
Acts 13:30 repeats the same resurrection claim — 'But God raised him from the dead' — confirming the apostolic message.
Acts 22:14 uses the same 'God of our fathers' phrase to describe Paul's appointment to know the Righteous One, reinforcing the divine origin of Jesus' resurrection.
1 Peter 2:24 says Jesus bore our sins 'on the tree,' directly echoing the crucifixion as the means of atonement.
Galatians 3:13 explains that being hanged on a tree made Jesus a curse for us, redeeming us from the law's curse.
Luke 24:20 recounts the crucifixion by the rulers — same event referenced in Acts 5:30.
Luke 23:33 describes the crucifixion at Calvary — directly matching the death referred to in Acts 5:30.
1 Thessalonians 2:15 echoes the accusation of killing Jesus, reinforcing the same charge Peter makes in Acts 5:30 against the Jewish leaders.
Mark 15:24 records the crucifixion — the very event Acts 5:30 summarizes as 'hanging on a tree'.
Romans 1:4 ties resurrection to Jesus' divine sonship, deepening the meaning of the resurrection stated in Acts 5:30.
1 Thessalonians 1:10 adds the eschatological hope of deliverance from wrath, building on the resurrection mentioned in Acts 5:30.
Hebrews 13:20 refers to God bringing Jesus back from the dead, paralleling the resurrection act in Acts 5:30 but with a covenantal focus.