Mark 10:34
And they shall mock him, and shall scourge him, and shall spit upon him, and shall kill him: and the third day he shall rise again.
Cross-references
Mark 15:29-30 shows passersby mocking Jesus on the cross, fulfilling His prediction of being mocked.
Mark 15:17-20 details Roman soldiers mocking and spitting on Jesus, fulfilling His prediction of Gentile mockery.
Mark 14:65 describes the mockery and spitting on Jesus, directly fulfilling His prediction of being mocked and spat upon.
In Mark 16:6, the angel announces Jesus has risen—fulfilling the 'after three days he will rise' prediction.
In Mark 15:19, the soldiers mock and spit on Jesus—exactly fulfilling the prediction of mockery and spitting.
In Mark 15:15, the predicted flogging is fulfilled as Pilate scourges Jesus.
In Mark 8:31, Jesus first predicts suffering, death, and resurrection—this later prediction adds details of mockery.
1 Corinthians 15:4 affirms Christ was raised on the third day according to Scripture — echoing the resurrection prediction here.
John 19:3 shows soldiers saluting and slapping Jesus — fulfilling the mockery and spitting prediction.
John 19:2 describes the crown of thorns and purple robe — part of the soldiers' mockery Jesus predicted.
Luke 23:35-39 records rulers, soldiers, and the thief mocking Jesus — fulfilling the prediction of being scorned.
Luke 23:11 recounts Herod's soldiers mocking Jesus with an elegant robe — another fulfillment of the predicted mockery.
Luke 22:63-65 shows guards mocking and beating Jesus — fulfilling the prediction of mockery and spitting.
Matthew 27:27-44 records soldiers mocking, spitting, and the crowd taunting — the direct fulfillment of Jesus' prediction.
Matthew 26:67 records the actual spitting and striking of Jesus at his trial — fulfilling the prediction made here.
Matthew 12:40 directly compares Jonah's three days to the Son of Man's — paralleling Jesus' resurrection after three days.
Hosea 6:2 speaks of revival after two days and raising on the third — a typological foreshadowing of Jesus' resurrection.
Isaiah 53:3 describes the suffering servant as 'despised and rejected' — the very mockery and rejection Jesus predicts here.
Isaiah 50:6 prophesies the servant offering his back to beatings and face to mockery — directly fulfilled in Jesus' passion.
Psalm 22:6-8 prophesies mockery and scorn — 'He trusts in the Lord; let him deliver him' — directly fulfilled in Jesus' passion.
Psalm 16:10 promises God will not abandon the holy one to the grave — a prophecy of Jesus' resurrection after three days.
In Matthew 27:63, the Jewish leaders recall Jesus' claim to rise after three days—confirming the prediction was remembered.
In Matthew 27:26, the predicted flogging is fulfilled as Pilate has Jesus scourged.
In Matthew 17:22, Jesus gives a shorter passion prediction—the same prophecy without the detailed mockery.
In Luke 9:22, another passion prediction repeats the core: suffer, rejected, killed, raised on third day.
Luke 23:33 records Jesus being crucified at Golgotha — directly fulfilling the death prediction in Mark 10:34.
Luke 24:6 announces Christ's resurrection — the direct fulfillment of the three-day prediction in Mark 10:34.
John 19:1 records Pilate flogging Jesus — directly fulfilling the flogging part of Mark 10:34's prediction.
Job 30:10 describes mockery and spitting on a righteous sufferer — mirroring the treatment Jesus foretells here.