Luke 3:19
But Herod the tetrarch, being reproved by him for Herodias his brother Philip’s wife, and for all the evils which Herod had done,
Cross-reference
Luke 13:32 calls Herod 'that fox'—confirming his cunning, destructive character that John had rebuked here.
In Proverbs 9:7, reproving a scoffer brings abuse — John's reproof of Herod exemplifies this, leading to his imprisonment.
In Proverbs 9:8, reproving a scoffer earns hatred — Herod's hatred for John (cf. Matthew 14:3) fulfills this proverb.
In Proverbs 15:12, a scoffer dislikes reproof — Herod's reaction to John's reproof illustrates this.
In Matthew 11:2, John is in prison — the direct result of reproving Herod as described in Luke 3:19.
In Matthew 14:3, Herod seizes John for reproving him about Herodias — the specific outcome of Luke 3:19.
In Matthew 14:4, John's identical rebuke 'It is not lawful' repeats the same confrontation with Herod over Herodias.
Mark 6:17 describes Herod's arrest of John because of Herodias — the consequence of John's rebuke in Luke 3:19.
Mark 6:18 records John's exact words to Herod: 'It is not lawful for you to have your brother's wife' — a parallel account.
Leviticus 18:16 forbids sex with a brother's wife — the law John invokes to rebuke Herod's marriage.
Matthew 17:12 identifies John as Elijah who suffered — linking his rebuke and imprisonment to prophetic destiny.
Mark 9:13 identifies John the Baptist as the Elijah who suffered—directly linking his rebuke and imprisonment here to the prophesied fate of Elijah.
John 3:24 notes John was not yet imprisoned, situating Jesus' early ministry before the events of this verse.