John 20:2

Then she runneth, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple, whom Jesus loved, and saith unto them, They have taken away the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid him.

Cross-reference

John 20:9 Parallel

John 20:9 notes that Peter and the beloved disciple did not yet understand the Scripture about Jesus' resurrection.

John 20:13 Parallel

John 20:13 shows Mary's conversation with angels, repeating her distress that the Lord has been taken away.

John 20:15 Parallel

John 20:15 continues the scene with Jesus appearing to Mary and asking why she weeps.

John 13:23 Historical context

John 13:23 first introduces the 'disciple whom Jesus loved' reclining at his side, giving context to his special intimacy.

John 19:26 Historical context

John 19:26 places the beloved disciple at the cross, entrusted with Mary, showing his close relationship and presence at Jesus' death.

John 21:7 Related theme

John 21:7 shows the beloved disciple recognizing the risen Jesus first, adding a later scene of his perceptiveness.

John 21:20 Historical context

John 21:20 summarizes the beloved disciple's identity, referencing his reclining at the Last Supper and his question about betrayal.

John 21:24 Historical context

John 21:24 identifies the beloved disciple as the witness and author of the Gospel, giving authoritative weight to the account.

Matthew 27:64 shows the leaders' fear that disciples would steal the body, exactly what Mary here assumes has happened.

Luke 24:1 Historical context

Luke 24:1 records the women arriving at the tomb, providing the context for Mary's report.

Luke 24:2 Historical context

Luke 24:2 also mentions the stone rolled away, the discovery that prompts Mary to run.

Luke 24:22 Historical context

Luke 24:22 reports the women's account of the empty tomb, directly referencing the event Mary describes.