John 3:32
And what he hath seen and heard, that he testifieth; and no man receiveth his testimony.
Cross-reference
John 3:33 immediately contrasts: whoever receives his testimony affirms God's truth, highlighting the rejection in 3:32.
John 1:11 states his own people did not receive him, parallel to 'no one receives his testimony' — a consistent rejection theme.
In John 8:26, Jesus again declares he speaks what he heard from the Father — the same divine testimony referenced here.
In John 8:38, Jesus speaks what he has seen from the Father — directly parallel to testifying from heaven.
In John 12:49, Jesus speaks the Father's commandment — parallel to testifying what he has seen and heard.
In John 14:10, Jesus' words come from the Father abiding in him — parallel to speaking what he has seen.
In John 16:13, the Spirit speaks what he hears — similar pattern of testifying from heaven.
John 5:20 explains that the Father shows the Son all things, grounding the firsthand testimony Jesus gives here.
John 15:15 says Jesus made known all he heard from the Father, consistent with his testimony — though disciples receive it.
Isaiah 53:1 asks who has believed the report — directly paralleling the rejection of Jesus' testimony in this verse.
Romans 10:16 cites Isaiah 53:1 about unbelief, linking to the same rejection of testimony described here.
1 John 5:9 expands on receiving God's testimony about His Son, directly connecting to the testimony Jesus gives and the response it requires.
Revelation 1:5 calls Jesus 'the faithful witness,' directly affirming His role of testifying to what He has seen, as in John 3:32.
In 1 John 4:14, the same eyewitness testimony about Jesus as the Savior from the Father appears, echoing the testimony theme.
Revelation 1:1 shows Jesus receiving revelation from God to show His servants, paralleling Jesus testifying what He has seen and heard from God.