Luke 20:35

But they which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world, and the resurrection from the dead, neither marry, nor are given in marriage:

Cross-references

Luke 21:36 Parallel

Luke 21:36 calls for readiness to stand before the Son of Man — same theme of worthiness for the coming age.

Luke 14:14 Related theme

Luke 14:14 promises repayment at the resurrection of the just, reinforcing the future resurrection reward.

Daniel 12:2 Allusion

Daniel 12:2 is the OT prophecy of resurrection to everlasting life — the foundational text behind this resurrection hope.

Matthew 22:29 is Matthew's parallel account of Jesus' reply to the Sadducees — directly parallels this same teaching context.

Mark 12:24 Parallel

In Mark 12:24, Jesus rebukes the Sadducees for ignorance, setting up the same resurrection discussion about marriage.

John 5:29 Parallel

John 5:29 speaks of the resurrection of life for the righteous — same event as the resurrection from the dead here.

Acts 24:15 Related theme

Acts 24:15 affirms a resurrection of both just and unjust — the same doctrine of resurrection Paul and Jesus teach.

2 Thessalonians 1:5 explicitly links suffering to being considered worthy of God's kingdom — directly parallels the worthiness theme.

Mark 12:25 Parallel

Mark 12:25 directly parallels Luke 20:35: the same teaching that risen ones do not marry.

Philippians 3:11 Related theme

Philippians 3:11 expresses Paul's goal to attain resurrection from the dead, mirroring Luke's 'worthy of that age and resurrection'.

Daniel 12:3 Allusion

Daniel 12:3 describes the wise shining in the resurrection — a parallel reward for those worthy of the age to come.

1 Corinthians 15:42 Related theme

1 Corinthians 15:42 describes imperishable resurrection bodies — a different emphasis but same resurrection topic.

Hebrews 11:35 Related theme

Hebrews 11:35 mentions resurrection to a better life — ties to the hope of a superior resurrection age.

Revelation 3:4 declares the faithful in Sardis 'worthy' to walk with Christ in white — same language of worthiness for final reward.