Isaiah 50:5
The Lord God hath opened mine ear, and I was not rebellious, neither turned away back.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 48:8 describes Israel's ear unopened and rebelliousness, contrasting with the Servant's opened ear and non-rebellion here.
Psalm 40:6-8 speaks of an open ear and delight to do God's will, prefiguring the Servant's obedient, non-rebellious response.
Matthew 26:39 shows Jesus submitting 'not as I will, but as you will', fulfilling the Servant's refusal to turn back.
John 8:29 has Jesus saying He always does what pleases the Father, directly matching the Servant's obedience and open ear.
John 14:31 declares Jesus does exactly as the Father commanded, echoing the Servant's non-rebellious, compliant posture.
In John 15:10, Jesus' own obedience to the Father mirrors the Servant's opened ear and refusal to turn back.
In Philippians 2:8, Christ's obedience to death fulfills the Servant's pattern of not rebelling or turning back.
In Hebrews 5:8, Jesus learning obedience through suffering echoes the Servant's opened ears and steadfast submission.
Ezekiel 2:8 echoes 'be not rebellious' — the same command to hear and obey, directly paralleling the servant's response.
Luke 9:51 shows Jesus setting his face toward Jerusalem — the same resolute obedience as the servant who does not turn back.
John 18:22 depicts Jesus struck during trial — the servant's non-rebellion leads to suffering, fulfilled in Christ's submission.
Acts 26:19: Paul says 'I was not disobedient' — directly echoing the servant's 'I was not rebellious' in testimony.
Philippians 2:7 describes Christ taking the form of a servant — the incarnation embodies the obedient servant's humility and submission.
In Hebrews 10:5-9, Christ's 'I have come to do your will' parallels the Servant's declaration of obedient listening.
Matthew 26:24 says the Son of Man goes as written — Jesus fulfills the obedient servant's path, even through betrayal.