Luke 9:44
Let these sayings sink down into your ears: for the Son of man shall be delivered into the hands of men.
Cross-reference
Luke 9:22 earlier in the same chapter gives a fuller prediction of Jesus' suffering and resurrection—reinforcing the same prophecy with more detail.
In Luke 24:44, Jesus reminds the disciples that everything written about him must be fulfilled, referring back to his earlier predictions including this one.
Luke 24:7 directly quotes Jesus' earlier words about being delivered into sinful hands—showing the exact fulfillment of this prediction.
Luke 24:6 recalls Jesus' predictions in Galilee—this verse is the angelic reminder that the betrayal and resurrection happened as foretold.
Luke 18:31 repeats the prediction of betrayal and fulfillment of prophecy—another instance of Jesus preparing his disciples for what's coming.
Luke 8:18 commands 'Take care how you hear' — directly parallel to Jesus' call to let words sink in. Same Gospel emphasis on attentive hearing.
In Luke 1:66, people lay up words about John's future in their hearts — mirroring the call here to let Jesus' prediction about His own destiny sink in.
In Luke 2:19, Mary treasures the shepherds' words — a parallel to Jesus' command here to internalize His own words about His coming betrayal.
In Luke 2:51, Mary again treasures events in her heart — similar to the charge here to let Jesus' words deeply sink in, emphasizing careful remembrance.
In Acts 4:28, it states that these human actions were predestined by God's hand and plan — the divine sovereignty behind the delivery predicted here.
In Acts 4:27, the prayer specifies Herod, Pilate, Gentiles, and Israel as the 'hands of men' into whom Jesus was delivered.
In Acts 3:13–15, Peter again states that Jesus was delivered over and killed, but God raised him — showing the fulfillment of Jesus' prediction.
In Acts 2:23, Peter proclaims that Jesus was delivered up according to God's foreknowledge — confirming that the predicted delivery was part of God's plan.
In John 19:11, Jesus explains that his being delivered over (same Greek word) is under God's authority, revealing the divine purpose behind the human betrayal.
John 16:4 shows Jesus telling disciples beforehand so they remember—same purpose as 'let these words sink' in the main verse. Strong thematic parallel.
In Mark 9:31, Jesus gives the same passion prediction — being delivered into men's hands and killed — using nearly identical wording.
In Mark 8:31, Jesus teaches that the Son of Man must suffer, be rejected, and killed, a parallel prediction.
In Matthew 26:2, Jesus directly states the Son of Man will be delivered up to be crucified, a close parallel.
In Matthew 20:19, the prediction adds delivery to Gentiles for mockery, flogging, and crucifixion.
In Matthew 20:18, Jesus predicts being delivered to chief priests and scribes, specifying the religious authorities involved.
In Matthew 17:23, the prediction continues with the killing and resurrection, expanding on the betrayal mentioned here.
In Matthew 17:22, the same phrase 'Son of Man is about to be delivered into the hands of men' appears with identical wording.
In Matthew 16:21, Jesus gives a similar prediction with more detail about suffering, death, and resurrection.
In Matthew 21:39, the tenants kill the son, continuing the parable's foreshadowing of Jesus' death.
In Matthew 21:38, the parable of the tenants depicts the son being killed, symbolically parallel to the betrayal here.
In John 2:19–22, Jesus predicts his death and resurrection using temple imagery — a different metaphor for the same event foretold here.
In 2 Samuel 24:14, David prefers falling into God's hand rather than man's — contrasting with Jesus being delivered into men's hands by God's will.
In Deuteronomy 32:46, Moses urges Israel to take all his words to heart — a similar call to heed important warnings, here applied to Jesus' prediction.