Mark 7:36
And he charged them that they should tell no man: but the more he charged them, so much the more a great deal they published it;
Cross-reference
In Mark 1:44, Jesus similarly orders a healed leper to tell no one — showing a consistent pattern of silence commands.
Mark 1:45 shows the healed leper spreading the news despite Jesus' command — just as the crowd here proclaims it widely.
Mark 3:12 has Jesus ordering unclean spirits not to reveal his identity — another instance of his charge to keep silence.
Mark 5:43 includes Jesus charging people not to tell about Jairus's daughter's resurrection — same pattern of commanding secrecy.
Mark 8:26 records Jesus telling a healed blind man not to enter the village — a parallel silencing command after a healing.
Mark 1:43 records the same stern charge to a healed leper — another instance of Jesus ordering silence after a miracle.
Mark 8:30 has Jesus order silence about his identity as Messiah — same command but in a different context.
Matthew 8:4 has Jesus telling a leper to tell no one — identical to the silence command given here after healing.
In Matthew 9:31, the healed blind men also disobey Jesus' command to keep silent — same pattern of zealously spreading the news.
Matthew 12:16 gives a general command to silence after many healings — a broader parallel to this specific order.