Luke 8:25
And he said unto them, Where is your faith? And they being afraid wondered, saying one to another, What manner of man is this! for he commandeth even the winds and water, and they obey him.
Cross-reference
Luke 12:28 uses the same phrase 'little faith' in a context of worry about clothing — Jesus associates lack of faith with anxiety, not just storms.
Luke 9:41 laments faithlessness — in 8:25 Jesus asks 'Where is your faith?' — both highlight disciples' lack of trust.
Luke 9:43 notes astonishment at God's majesty — the disciples' amazement in 8:25 parallels that response to Jesus' power.
Genesis 1:9 shows God commanding the waters to gather, prefiguring Christ's authority over the sea in the storm — a divine act.
Job 38:10 describes God setting boundaries for the sea, affirming his sovereignty — Christ's calming of the storm demonstrates that same divine authority.
Proverbs 8:29 shows wisdom setting the sea's boundaries — Jesus' command over the storm mirrors that divine authority.
Proverbs 30:4 asks who controls wind and water — Jesus calming the storm reveals He is the answer.
Matthew 6:30 also calls the disciples 'little faith' regarding provision — reinforcing that trust in God's care is the antidote to fear.
Matthew 8:26 is the parallel account where Jesus directly rebukes 'you of little faith', the same event with identical wording.
Matthew 14:31 again questions 'little faith' during a storm, reinforcing the link between fear and trust in Jesus' power over nature.
Mark 4:40 records the same event with Jesus asking 'Have you still no faith?' — a direct parallel to Luke's account.
Mark 4:41 captures the disciples' identical response — 'Who then is this?' — showing their awe at his command over wind and sea.
Psalm 29:4 describes the LORD's powerful voice in the storm — Jesus speaks and nature obeys, showing His divine voice.
Mark 6:51 records similar amazement when Jesus calms the wind on water — reinforcing His authority over creation.
Matthew 17:20 teaches that faith as small as a mustard seed can move mountains, expanding on the faith Jesus questions here.
John 11:40 links belief to seeing God's glory, echoing the lesson that faith reveals Jesus' divine power in both the storm and Lazarus's resurrection.