John 2:4
Jesus saith unto her, Woman, what have I to do with thee? mine hour is not yet come.
Cross-reference
In John 7:6, Jesus repeats 'my time has not yet come,' directly echoing the same idea of a divinely appointed schedule.
In John 7:30, the narrator explains no one arrested Jesus because his hour had not yet come, using the same timing motif.
In John 8:20, again his hour had not yet come, reinforcing the theme of divine control over events.
In John 12:23, Jesus declares 'the hour has come,' contrasting with his earlier statement that it had not yet come.
In John 13:1, Jesus knows his hour has come to depart, marking the fulfillment of his earlier 'not yet' statement.
In John 19:26, Jesus addresses Mary as 'woman' at the cross when his hour has come — fulfilling the 'not yet' from this verse.
In Luke 2:49, Jesus tells his earthly parents his Father's business takes priority, echoing his later rebuff of Mary's suggestion.
Matthew 8:29 combines the same rhetorical question with concern about timing — echoing Jesus' 'hour has not yet come'.
In 2 Samuel 19:22, David uses the same phrase 'what have I to do with you?' to distance himself from his men, paralleling Jesus' response to his mother.