Mark 11:27
And they come again to Jerusalem: and as he was walking in the temple, there come to him the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders,
Cross-reference
Mark 14:1 shows the authorities plotting Jesus' death — the direct consequence of the conflict over his authority here.
Mark 14:49 recalls Jesus' daily temple teaching, highlighting the contrast between his public presence and their secret arrest.
Mark 12:35 has Jesus teaching in the temple again, this time exposing the scribes' error about the Christ.
Psalm 2:1-5 depicts rulers conspiring against the Lord's anointed — a pattern fulfilled when temple leaders question Jesus' authority.
Matthew 21:23-27 recounts the identical confrontation — the parallel account of Jesus' authority being challenged in the temple.
Luke 20:1-8 is the parallel account of the same temple confrontation over Jesus' authority.
Acts 4:5-8 shows the same religious leaders later questioning Peter's authority, echoing Jesus' own interrogation.
Matthew 21:25 records Jesus' counter-question about John's baptism, the immediate follow-up to the authority challenge.
Luke 19:47 parallels the same situation: Jesus teaching daily in the temple while leaders plot his death.
John 2:18 shows a similar demand for a sign of authority after the temple cleansing, reinforcing the pattern.
Acts 4:27 lists the rulers who opposed Jesus, broadening the conspiracy beyond the temple leaders.