Luke 4:35
And Jesus rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, and come out of him. And when the devil had thrown him in the midst, he came out of him, and hurt him not.
Cross-reference
Luke 4:39 shows Jesus rebuking a fever with the same command pattern (rebuke + departure) as in Luke 4:35 with the demon.
Luke 4:41 describes Jesus rebuking multiple demons and silencing them, directly continuing the pattern from the single demon in Luke 4:35.
In Luke 9:42, Jesus rebukes an unclean spirit and heals a boy—directly parallel to His rebuke here, both demonstrating authority over demons.
In Zechariah 3:2, the LORD rebukes Satan—a direct parallel to Jesus rebuking the unclean spirit here. Both show divine authority over evil.
In Matthew 8:26, Jesus rebukes the storm—showing the same commanding authority over creation as He exercises over demons here.
In Matthew 17:18, Jesus rebukes a demon and it comes out—the same direct command and expulsion as here.
Mark 1:26 records the same exorcism with the demon convulsing the man and crying out — a synoptic parallel.
In Mark 3:11, unclean spirits fall and cry out 'You are the Son of God'—similar to the demon's outcry here before Jesus rebukes it.
In Acts 16:18, Paul rebukes a spirit 'in the name of Jesus Christ' and it comes out—mirroring Jesus' own command here.
Mark 1:25 records Jesus' rebuke 'Be silent and come out' — the direct command preceding the exorcism in Luke.
Mark 9:25 has Jesus commanding a spirit to come out — a parallel exorcism command with similar authority.
Mark 9:20 shows the demon convulsing the boy upon seeing Jesus — similar initial reaction to Christ's authority.
Mark 9:26 shows a similar exorcism pattern: the demon convulses the boy and comes out with a loud cry.