John 10:37
If I do not the works of my Father, believe me not.
Cross-references
John 10:25 shows Jesus already appealing to His works as testimony, providing the background for His argument here: 'believe the works.'
John 10:32 lists many good works from the Father, reinforcing the same evidential basis Jesus uses in this verse to challenge disbelief.
In John 14:10, Jesus says the Father does the works through him — explaining why his works are the Father's works.
In John 5:36, Jesus says his works bear witness that the Father sent him — directly parallel to the test here.
In John 5:31, Jesus says self-testimony isn't enough; here he offers his works as external evidence of his identity.
In John 12:37-40, despite many signs, people still did not believe — illustrating the unbelief Jesus addresses here.
In John 15:24, Jesus says his unique works leave them without excuse — building on the argument that works validate his identity.
In John 9:4, Jesus says he must do the works of the Father — the same commission that validates his identity here.
In John 11:42, Jesus explains his prayer is for others to believe he was sent — linking the theme of works leading to faith.
Acts 2:22 affirms that God performed miracles through Jesus, confirming His divine approval — the works Jesus references as proof.
In Matthew 11:20-24, Jesus condemns cities for not repenting despite miracles — echoing the test of belief based on works.