Mark 5:34

And he said unto her, Daughter, thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy plague.

Cross-reference

Mark 5:29 Historical context

In Mark 5:29, the woman is instantly healed — the physical event that leads to Jesus' declaration here.

Mark 5:36 Parallel

In Mark 5:36, Jesus tells Jairus 'only believe' — immediately after this healing, reinforcing the same faith principle.

Mark 10:52 Parallel

In Mark 10:52, Jesus tells blind Bartimaeus the same: 'your faith has made you well' — a repeated formula for healing.

Mark 2:5 Parallel

In Mark 2:5, Jesus sees the paralytic's faith and forgives his sins — another example where faith precedes a restorative act.

Matthew 9:22 is the parallel account of this same healing, repeating 'your faith has made you well.'

Luke 7:50 Parallel

In Luke 7:50, Jesus tells the sinful woman: 'your faith has saved you; go in peace' — identical structure and phrase.

Luke 8:48 Parallel

Luke 8:48 is the parallel account, recording the same words: 'your faith has made you well; go in peace.'

Luke 17:19 Parallel

In Luke 17:19, Jesus tells the grateful leper: 'your faith has made you well' — same declaration of saving faith.

Luke 18:42 Parallel

In Luke 18:42, Jesus tells the blind beggar: 'your faith has saved you' — same essential phrase for healing.

In Matthew 15:28, Jesus commends the Canaanite woman's great faith and heals her daughter — another instance of faith leading to healing.

Acts 14:9 Related theme

Acts 14:9 describes Paul seeing the lame man's faith to be healed — a thematic parallel of faith leading to physical restoration.