Genesis 22:11

And the angel of the Lord called unto him out of heaven, and said, Abraham, Abraham: and he said, Here am I.

Cross-reference

Genesis 22:1 mirrors this moment — God calls 'Abraham' and he answers 'Here I am,' the same divine call and response that frames this entire test.

Genesis 22:12 Historical context

Genesis 22:12 completes the angel's message here — commanding Abraham to stop and explaining the test has been passed.

Genesis 22:16 Historical context

Genesis 22:16 unfolds what this divine call leads to — God swearing by Himself to bless Abraham's seed because of his obedience.

Genesis 22:15 continues the angel's speech, called a second time from heaven — the direct narrative continuation of this same divine intervention.

Genesis 21:17 mirrors this closely — an angel calls from heaven to save Ishmael from death, just as the Angel calls here to spare Isaac.

In Genesis 46:2, God calls 'Jacob, Jacob' and he answers 'Here I am' — the identical call-and-response formula, another patriarch addressed twice by God.

Exodus 3:4 Parallel

In Exodus 3:4, God calls 'Moses, Moses!' and he answers 'Here I am' — the exact same call-and-response pattern, showing a repeated divine calling formula.

Acts 9:4 Parallel

In Acts 9:4, Jesus calls 'Saul, Saul' from heaven, interrupting his journey — echoing the pattern of a sudden divine voice calling someone by name twice.

Acts 22:7 Parallel

In Acts 22:7, Jesus calls 'Saul, Saul' from heaven — the same double-name pattern, both stopping someone in their tracks during a divine encounter.

In 1 Samuel 3:10, the LORD calls 'Samuel! Samuel!' — another double-name divine call, though Samuel's reply ('Speak, for Your servant is listening') varies from 'Here I am.'