John 18:27
Peter then denied again: and immediately the cock crew.
Cross-references
John 13:38 contains Jesus' prediction that the rooster would not crow until Peter denied him three times — now fulfilled.
John 21:17 shows Peter's threefold affirmation of love, reversing his three denials — a deliberate restoration.
Matthew 26:34 records Jesus' prediction of Peter's three denials before the rooster crows — a parallel prophecy now fulfilled.
Matthew 26:74 describes Peter's third denial with cursing and swearing, and the immediate rooster crow — parallel details.
Matthew 26:75 adds Peter's remembrance of Jesus' word and his bitter weeping after the rooster crow — the emotional aftermath.
Mark 14:30 adds that the rooster would crow twice before Peter's three denials — a detail not in John's account.
Mark 14:71 records Peter's third denial with cursing and swearing — matching John's third denial with added intensity.
In Mark 14:72, Peter remembers Jesus' prediction and weeps — adding emotional aftermath not in John's account.
Luke 22:34 records Jesus' prophecy of Peter's threefold denial before cockcrow — fulfilled here.
Luke 22:60-62 adds that the Lord turned and looked at Peter, prompting bitter weeping — a detail missing in John.
Matthew 26:73 reveals Peter's Galilean accent betrayed him — a detail not in John's denial account.
Mark 14:70 likewise notes Peter's accent as a Galilean — adding the bystanders' reasoning for identifying him.
Luke 22:59 describes the third denial about an hour later — directly parallel to John 18:27's third denial.
Luke 22:57 records Peter's first denial ('I do not know him') — an earlier stage of the same narrative.
Mark 14:68 describes Peter's first denial and the first rooster crow — a different point in the sequence than John's third denial.