Isaiah 43:11
I, even I, am the Lord; and beside me there is no saviour.
Cross-reference
In Isaiah 43:3, God is also called your Savior, reinforcing the same exclusive claim within the same prophetic context.
Isaiah 43:25 shows God alone blots out transgressions, a specific act of salvation tied to His exclusive identity.
In Isaiah 45:22, the call to be saved because God alone is God directly follows from the 'no savior besides me' claim.
In Isaiah 45:21, the identical phrase 'there is no other god besides me, a Savior' repeats the exclusive claim.
In Isaiah 12:2, the same declaration that God is my salvation echoes the exclusive savior theme.
Isaiah 63:8 states God 'became their Savior,' directly echoing His exclusive saving action for Israel.
Isaiah 45:15 calls God 'the Savior,' affirming the same exclusive saving role.
Isaiah 44:6 declares 'besides me there is no god,' directly paralleling the exclusive savior claim.
Isaiah 37:16 proclaims God alone is God over all kingdoms, echoing the exclusive sovereignty behind His saving role.
In Hosea 13:4, the exact same formula 'besides me there is no savior' appears, making it a direct parallel.
In Revelation 7:10-12, the heavenly crowd ascribes salvation to God and the Lamb, directly affirming the exclusive savior from Isaiah 43:11.
In Luke 1:47, Mary calls God her Savior, reflecting the OT confession in a NT context.
In Luke 2:11, Jesus is declared the Savior, fulfilling the OT claim that Yahweh alone saves.
Acts 4:12 echoes Isaiah's exclusivity, declaring salvation in no other name than Jesus, identifying Him as the sole Savior.
Titus 2:13 identifies Jesus as 'our great God and Savior', applying Isaiah's exclusive Savior title to Christ.
1 John 4:14 testifies that the Father sent the Son as Savior of the world, fulfilling Isaiah's exclusive salvation.
1 John 5:20 calls Jesus the true God, directly aligning with Isaiah's 'no savior apart from me'.
Jude 1:25 ascribes glory to 'the only God our Savior', echoing Isaiah's exclusive salvation.
In Revelation 1:17, Jesus claims 'I am the first and the last,' identifying Himself with the exclusive divine identity of the only savior.
In Deuteronomy 6:4, the Shema's declaration of God's oneness grounds the exclusive savior claim.
Jeremiah 3:23 says salvation is in the Lord alone, reinforcing the exclusive savior theme.
Psalm 3:8 declares salvation belongs to the Lord, reinforcing the exclusive saving role of God.
In 2 Kings 5:15, Naaman confesses no God in all the earth but in Israel, acknowledging the exclusive deity of Isaiah 43:11.
In Acts 5:31, Jesus is exalted as Leader and Savior, fulfilling the exclusive saviorhood declared in Isaiah.
In Acts 13:23, God brings Jesus as a Savior from David's lineage, directly fulfilling the OT promise of a sole Savior.
In 1 Timothy 1:1, Paul calls God 'our Savior', directly echoing the exclusive saviorhood declared in Isaiah 43:11.
In Exodus 14:13, Moses promises the salvation of the LORD, a direct instance of God acting as the only savior from Isaiah 43:11.
In Exodus 12:12, God judges Egypt's gods and delivers Israel, demonstrating He alone is the savior as in Isaiah 43:11.
In 1 Samuel 2:2, Hannah declares there is none besides the LORD, paralleling the exclusive savior declaration in Isaiah 43:11.
In Deuteronomy 32:12, the LORD alone guided Israel, reinforcing the exclusive guidance and salvation from Isaiah 43:11.
In Hosea 1:7, God saves Judah by Himself, not by military means, illustrating the exclusive divine salvation.
In Deuteronomy 33:26, there is none like God who helps, echoing the exclusive savior claim of Isaiah 43:11.