Luke 5:25
And immediately he rose up before them, and took up that whereon he lay, and departed to his own house, glorifying God.
Cross-reference
In Luke 5:13, Jesus instantly heals a leper with a word, paralleling the immediate rising of the paralytic here.
In Luke 13:13, Jesus heals a crippled woman and she glorifies God — the same sequence as the paralytic's response.
In Luke 18:43, blind Bartimaeus is healed and glorifies God immediately, mirroring the paralytic's response.
In Luke 17:15-18, a healed leper glorifies God, but only one returns thanks; the paralytic also glorifies God after healing.
Psalm 103:1-3 calls to praise God for forgiving sins and healing diseases — exactly what the healed man does here.
Psalm 107:20-22 describes healing by God's word and calls for thanksgiving — the man's glorifying God fulfills that call.
Matthew 9:8 records the crowd's response to the same healing — they praise God for giving authority to man, while here the healed man himself glorifies God.
Psalm 50:23 connects thanksgiving with God's salvation — the healed man's glorifying God embodies that principle.
In John 9:24, the healed blind man is urged to 'give glory to God' — similarly, the paralytic here glorifies God after healing.