Luke 7:50
And he said to the woman, Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace.
Cross-reference
In Luke 8:48, Jesus says the same words — 'your faith has saved you; go in peace' — to the woman with the issue of blood.
Luke 18:42 repeats the same phrase — 'your faith has saved you' — when Jesus heals the blind beggar.
In Matthew 9:22, Jesus tells the hemorrhaging woman exactly the same words — 'your faith has saved you' — showing a consistent pattern.
Mark 5:34 also records Jesus saying to the woman with the issue of blood, 'your faith has saved you; go in peace' — identical statement.
In Mark 10:52, Jesus uses the identical phrase 'your faith has saved you' to another recipient, showing a consistent pattern of faith leading to salvation/healing.
Romans 5:1 explicitly ties justification by faith to peace with God, directly echoing the peace Jesus gives the woman after her faith.
Ephesians 2:8-10 provides the theological basis that salvation is by grace through faith, not works—exemplified by the woman's faith here.
James 2:14-26 argues that genuine faith produces works—the woman's loving actions demonstrate that her faith was active, not dead.
Matthew 15:28 commends the Canaanite woman's faith and grants her request — closely parallels Jesus' commendation of this woman's faith and forgiveness.
Matthew 8:10 praises the centurion's great faith — similarly, Jesus here commends the woman's faith that saved her.
1 Samuel 1:17 Eli blesses Hannah after her prayer, offering peace in response to her faith—parallel to Jesus blessing the woman.
1 Samuel 25:35 David grants peace to Abigail after her wise intervention—parallel to Jesus granting peace to the woman after her act of faith.
In 2 Kings 5:19, Elisha dismisses Naaman with 'Go in peace' after healing — similar to Jesus' dismissal of the forgiven woman here.