John 10:25
Jesus answered them, I told you, and ye believed not: the works that I do in my Father’s name, they bear witness of me.
Cross-references
In John 10:32, Jesus immediately appeals to his good works, reinforcing his claim that his works bear witness.
In John 10:32, Jesus immediately appeals to his good works, reinforcing his claim that his works bear witness.
In John 10:37, Jesus says if he doesn't do Father's works, don't believe — directly reinforcing that works bear witness.
In John 5:36, Jesus says his works bear witness of him, exactly the same claim he reiterates here to the unbelieving Jews.
In John 5:36, Jesus makes the same claim — his works bear witness of him — providing an earlier parallel to this statement.
In John 8:24, Jesus warns that unbelief in his 'I am' leads to death, showing the stakes of the rejection he cites here.
In John 8:58, Jesus declares 'Before Abraham was, I am', a specific instance where he plainly told them his identity.
In John 11:47, the council acknowledges Jesus' many signs but plots his death — mirroring the unbelief despite works here.
John 12:37 directly states that despite many signs, they still did not believe — the same rejection referenced here.
John 5:43 says Jesus came in Father's name and was not received — same rejection despite coming in Father's name as here.
In John 3:2, Nicodemus acknowledges that Jesus' signs prove God is with him — a recognition that the unbelievers in John 10:25 reject.
In John 7:31, many believe because of Jesus' signs, in contrast to the unbelief here.
In John 14:11, Jesus urges belief on account of the works themselves — opposite to the unbelief here.
John 20:30 notes that Jesus did many other signs — expanding on the works that testify in John 10:25.
Acts 2:22 proclaims that Jesus was attested by mighty works and wonders — confirming the witness of works Jesus cites.
In Luke 22:67, Jesus similarly responds to demands to declare identity by saying they won't believe — directly parallels his statement here.
In Matthew 11:5, Jesus lists miracles as proof of his identity — same works that bear witness here.
Acts 10:38 describes Jesus' healing works as evidence of God's presence — echoing the testimony of works in John 10:25.