Luke 8:48
And he said unto her, Daughter, be of good comfort: thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace.
Cross-reference
Luke 7:50 uses the identical phrase 'Your faith has saved you; go in peace' for the sinful woman—both times Jesus affirms faith's power.
Luke 17:19 repeats 'Your faith has made you well' to the grateful leper—same formula for healing through faith.
Luke 18:42 says 'Your faith has saved you' to the blind beggar—again Jesus attributes healing to faith and sends him off.
Matthew 9:22 records the identical event—same woman, same words 'Daughter, your faith has made you well.' Direct parallel account.
In Mark 5:34, this same event is recorded with identical wording — the woman is commended for her faith and sent away healed.
Matthew 12:20 describes the Messiah's gentleness toward the weak—Jesus' tender handling of this fearful woman embodies that character.
Matthew 8:13 has Jesus tell the centurion 'as you have believed, so be it done'—faith is the basis for healing, similar theme.
In Mark 2:5, Jesus forgives the paralytic because of their faith — linking faith to spiritual healing, as here it is linked to physical healing.
In Acts 14:9, Paul sees a lame man who has faith to be healed — echoing the same link between personal faith and physical healing.
2 Corinthians 6:18 promises God will be a Father to us—Jesus calling her 'Daughter' shows this fatherly relationship realized in Christ.
In Hebrews 4:2, the preached word profits only when mixed with faith — contrasting the woman's active faith with Israel's lack of faith.
In 1 Samuel 1:17, Eli tells Hannah 'Go in peace' — the same blessing, but for a prayer for a child rather than healing.