Luke 14:1
And it came to pass, as he went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees to eat bread on the sabbath day, that they watched him.
Cross-references
Luke 6:7 describes the same Pharisaic surveillance — watching for Sabbath violations to accuse Jesus, exactly the context of 14:1.
Luke 11:54 specifies the Pharisees lying in wait to trap Jesus — the same motive seen in 14:1's 'watching carefully'.
Luke 20:20 describes spies sent to catch Jesus in his words — identical motive to the Pharisees watching him at dinner in 14:1.
Luke 7:36 depicts another Pharisee inviting Jesus to dinner — nearly identical setting of dining with a Pharisee.
Luke 11:37 is another Pharisee dinner invitation — a repeated social context for Jesus' controversial teachings.
Luke 11:53 shows the Pharisees' escalating hostility after a meal — same adversarial context as the dinner in 14:1.
Psalm 37:32 describes the wicked lying in wait for the righteous, exactly what the Pharisees are doing to Jesus here.
Psalm 62:4 describes those who plan to topple the righteous with lies — parallels the Pharisees' intentions toward Jesus.
Psalm 64:5 depicts evildoers encouraging each other in secret snares — echoes the Pharisees' conspiracy to trap Jesus.
Isaiah 29:20 speaks of those 'with an eye for evil' — exactly the Pharisees' malicious watching of Jesus.
Isaiah 29:21 describes false accusers who ensnare the innocent — parallels the Pharisees trying to trap Jesus in His words.
In Mark 3:2, the same hostile watching on the Sabbath appears — Pharisees seeking to accuse Jesus.
Proverbs 23:7 describes a person whose heart is not with you — parallels the Pharisees' outward courtesy but inward hostility.