Mark 12:9

What shall therefore the lord of the vineyard do? he will come and destroy the husbandmen, and will give the vineyard unto others.

Cross-reference

Luke 19:27 Parallel

Luke 19:27 echoes the same theme: the king executes those who rejected his rule, parallel to destroying the tenants.

Romans 11:1-12 discusses Israel's hardening and Gentile inclusion, showing the mechanism behind giving the vineyard to others.

Romans 10:21 describes Israel as disobedient, justifying why the vineyard was taken from them and given to others.

Romans 10:20 quotes Isaiah about Gentiles finding God, directly illustrating the 'others' who receive the vineyard.

Acts 28:23-28 repeats this pattern: Paul quotes Isaiah, declaring salvation sent to Gentiles because Jews would not listen.

Acts 13:46-48 shows the parable fulfilled as Paul turns to Gentiles after Jewish rejection, giving the vineyard to others.

Luke 20:16 Parallel

Luke 20:16 gives the identical answer — the owner destroys tenants and gives vineyard to others.

Luke 20:15 Parallel

Luke 20:15 asks the same question after the son is killed — parallel account of the parable.

Luke 19:41-44 predicts Jerusalem's destruction — the historical outworking of the judgment Jesus speaks of in the vineyard parable.

Matthew 23:34-38 pronounces judgment on Jerusalem for killing the prophets — the same generation condemned in the vineyard parable.

Matthew 22:7 mirrors this parable — a king destroys those who killed his servants and burns their city, reinforcing the judgment theme.

Matthew 21:43 explicitly states the kingdom will be taken from you and given to a people producing fruit — direct application of the parable.

Matthew 21:41 records the same judgment — the tenants destroyed and vineyard given to others — parallel to this verse.

Matthew 21:40 mirrors this rhetorical question about the owner's response, continuing the same parable.

Matthew 8:11-13 shows many from east and west feasting with Abraham while sons of kingdom are cast out — same reversal of privilege.

Isaiah 5:5-7 is the OT vineyard allegory Jesus draws on — God's judgment on unfruitful Israel, whose tenants will be replaced.

Isaiah 5:3 Allusion

Isaiah 5:3 is the original vineyard song Jesus alludes to — God calls Israel to judge between him and his vineyard, setting the parable's foundation.

Matthew 13:12 states the principle of taking from those who have not — directly reflected in the vineyard being taken away from the tenants.

Romans 9:30-33 explains that Gentiles attained righteousness while Israel stumbled over the stone — the vineyard given to others.