Mark 5:43
And he charged them straitly that no man should know it; and commanded that something should be given her to eat.
Cross-references
Mark 1:43 also records Jesus issuing a stern warning to a healed person to keep quiet — same secrecy command.
Mark 3:12 has Jesus warning demons not to reveal his identity — part of the same Messianic secret motif.
Mark 7:36 repeats the pattern: Jesus commands witnesses not to tell anyone after a healing.
Mark 8:26 also has Jesus commanding silence after a healing (blind man), paralleling the secrecy pattern here.
Mark 9:9 records another command for secrecy after the transfiguration, echoing the same pattern of silence.
Matthew 8:4 also has Jesus ordering a healed leper to ‘see that you don’t tell anyone’ — identical secrecy command.
Matthew 9:30 shows Jesus warning two blind men to ‘see that no one knows about this’ — same silence instruction.
Matthew 12:16-18 connects Jesus’s command to silence to Isaiah’s prophecy about the chosen servant — revealing its theological basis.
Matthew 17:9 instructs the disciples not to tell about the Transfiguration until after the resurrection — a timed secrecy command.
Luke 5:14 has Jesus ordering a healed leper not to tell anyone but to go to the priest — same pattern of command.
Luke 8:56 is the parallel account with the identical command to tell no one after raising Jairus's daughter.
Luke 8:55 is the direct parallel, explicitly recording the command to give the girl something to eat after her return to life.