Mark 3:10
For he had healed many; insomuch that they pressed upon him for to touch him, as many as had plagues.
Cross-reference
In Mark 5:27, the woman with a hemorrhage touches Jesus' garment — a specific example of the desperate touching described here.
In Mark 5:28, the woman expresses her belief that touching his garment will heal her — embodying the faith behind the pressing crowd.
Mark 5:29 shows the woman with the issue of blood touching Jesus – a concrete example of the pressing crowd seeking healing.
In Mark 6:56, crowds implore to touch even the fringe of his garment and are healed — a later summary echoing this same touching-for-healing pattern.
Mark 5:24 describes the crowd pressing around Jesus – the same scene as here, just before the healing of Jairus' daughter.
In Matthew 14:36, people seek only to touch the fringe of his garment and are healed — a parallel account to Mark 6:56, reinforcing the touching motif.
In Acts 19:12, handkerchiefs that touched Paul's skin heal the sick — a direct parallel to healing through contact with Jesus' garment.
Luke 6:19 directly parallels: the crowd sought to touch Jesus and were healed by power from him.
In Acts 5:15, people bring the sick for Peter's shadow to touch them — an apostolic continuation of seeking healing through physical contact.