John 12:41
These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and spake of him.
Cross-references
John 1:18 says no one has seen God except the Son; Isaiah saw the Son's glory, revealing the invisible God through Christ.
John 14:9 states that seeing Jesus is seeing the Father; Isaiah saw Jesus' glory, thus seeing the Father.
John 2:11 says Jesus manifested his glory at Cana—the same glory Isaiah saw (John 12:41). A direct parallel within John's Gospel.
John 11:40 promises seeing God's glory through resurrection—the same glory Isaiah saw. Strong parallel within John's Gospel about glory revealed.
John 5:39 says Scriptures testify of Christ; Isaiah's vision is a prime example of that testimony.
Isaiah 6:1-5 is the vision of the Lord that John 12:41 says Isaiah saw — directly cited as seeing Christ's glory.
Isaiah 6:9 is the command to speak that John 12:41 refers to — the source of the quote about deafness and blindness.
Isaiah 6:10 is the verse about hardening hearts quoted in John 12:40 — John 12:41 identifies this as what Isaiah spoke.
2 Corinthians 4:6 describes the glory of God shining in the face of Christ; Isaiah saw that same glory.
Hebrews 1:3 calls Jesus the radiance of God's glory; Isaiah saw that radiance.
1 Peter 1:11 says the Spirit of Christ in prophets predicted His glories; Isaiah saw those glories.
Isaiah 40:5 declares that all flesh will see God's glory—the same glory John 12:41 says Isaiah saw. Strong parallel prophecy.
In Acts 7:55, Stephen sees Jesus standing at God's right hand in glory — mirroring Isaiah's vision of Christ's glory in this verse.
In 2 Corinthians 3:18, believers behold Christ's glory and are transformed — extending the pattern of seeing divine glory from Isaiah's vision.
Job 42:5 describes seeing God firsthand—similar to Isaiah's vision of glory in John 12:41. Both involve a personal encounter with divine glory.
Acts 10:43 says all prophets witness to Christ; Isaiah's prophecy in John 12:41 is a specific witness.