Luke 1:69
And hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David;
Cross-reference
Luke 2:11 announces the birth of a Savior in the city of David — the fulfillment of the horn of salvation raised from David's house.
Jeremiah 23:6 adds that this king brings salvation and is called 'The LORD our righteousness'—the very salvation the horn symbolizes.
In Revelation 22:16, Jesus calls himself the root and descendant of David, directly echoing the Davidic horn of salvation.
In Romans 1:3, Paul affirms Jesus as descended from David, grounding the 'house of David' in Luke's messianic claim.
Mark 11:10 acclaims the coming Davidic kingdom—the same kingdom hope that the horn’s raising fulfills.
Amos 9:11 speaks of raising David’s fallen booth—the horn of salvation is that restoration of David’s house.
Ezekiel 37:24 promises one Davidic king over a reunited people—the horn of salvation is that king who unifies.
Ezekiel 34:24 names David as prince with God as their God—identifying the horn’s ruler as both servant and prince.
Ezekiel 34:23 foretells one shepherd, David, who feeds the flock—the same shepherd the horn of salvation embodies.
Jeremiah 33:15-26 expands the Davidic covenant, guaranteeing an eternal throne—fulfilled in the horn raised from David’s house.
1 Samuel 2:10 introduces the 'horn of his anointed' imagery, which Luke 1:69 applies to Jesus as the horn of salvation.
Jeremiah 23:5 promises a righteous Branch from David’s line—the same royal deliverer Luke 1:69 calls the horn of salvation.
Isaiah 11:1-5 describes a shoot from Jesse's stump, a righteous ruler — the horn of salvation is this Spirit-filled Davidic king.
Isaiah 9:7 promises an endless kingdom on David's throne — the horn of salvation establishes this eternal reign.
Isaiah 9:6 prophesies a child born to reign — the horn of salvation is this Davidic king, the Messiah.
Psalm 18:2 contains 'horn of my salvation,' a phrase Luke 1:69 attributes to Jesus as the Messiah's horn.
2 Samuel 22:3 uses 'horn of my salvation' from David's song, echoed in Luke 1:69 for the Messiah.
Psalm 132:17 promises God will make a horn sprout for David — Luke announces this horn of salvation raised in David's house.
Psalm 89:3 records God's covenant oath to David — the horn of salvation is the fulfillment of that sworn promise.
Psalm 89:20-37 details God's covenant with David, including that his horn will be exalted — Luke's horn of salvation echoes this entire promise.
Isaiah 16:5 describes a righteous Davidic king on the throne — the same Messiah whom God raises up as a horn of salvation.
Psalm 132:11 records God's oath to David: a descendant on his throne — the very promise fulfilled in this horn of salvation.
Acts 15:16 quotes Amos about rebuilding David's fallen tent — the restoration of David's house from which the horn of salvation arises.
Acts 13:23 directly states that God brought Jesus, a Savior from David's offspring, as promised — the same Davidic horn of salvation.
Acts 2:30 cites God's oath to set one of David's descendants on his throne — the promise underlying the horn of salvation here.
Matthew 22:42 shows the Jewish expectation that the Christ is David's son — the very lineage declared here for the horn of salvation.
Matthew 1:1 explicitly calls Jesus 'son of David', confirming the Davidic lineage from which the horn of salvation is raised.
Lamentations 2:3 describes God cutting off every horn of Israel — contrasting with God now raising a horn of salvation.
Jeremiah 33:21 affirms the unbreakable covenant with David — guaranteeing a son to reign, fulfilled in this horn.
In Psalm 18:50, David celebrates God’s salvation and steadfast love to his anointed and offspring, echoing the horn of salvation.
Jeremiah 30:9 promises God will raise up David their king — directly parallel to the raising of a horn from David's house.
Ezekiel 29:21 speaks of a horn springing up for the house of Israel — similar imagery of God raising a strong deliverer for His people.
In 2 Chronicles 6:4, Solomon praises God for fulfilling his promise to David, which ultimately points to the Messiah’s arrival.
In 1 Kings 11:36, God preserves a lamp for David’s line, foreshadowing the enduring dynasty that culminates in Christ.
Jeremiah 33:14 declares God will fulfill his promise to Israel — the promise of a Davidic king, which this horn embodies.
In 1 Kings 1:48, David blesses God for a successor to his throne, prefiguring the ultimate Davidic king raised up in Luke.
Revelation 5:6 shows the Lamb with seven horns — linking to the 'horn of salvation' metaphor, symbolizing Christ's power as the deliverer.
Ezekiel 21:27 prophesies the coming of the rightful ruler — the same Davidic king celebrated here as a horn of salvation.
In 2 Chronicles 21:7, God spares David’s house due to his covenant, ensuring the line through which Christ would come.
In 1 Kings 15:4, God gives a lamp to David’s line for his sake, mirroring the promise of a lasting Davidic salvation.
1 Kings 11:13 shows God preserving a tribe for David's sake — demonstrating His faithfulness to the Davidic line that produces this horn.
In Psalm 75:10, the lifting of the righteous’s horn symbolizes exaltation, paralleling the horn of salvation raised by God.
Isaiah 42:6 speaks of the Servant as a covenant and light — a parallel saving role, but without the horn/Davidic imagery.