Mark 8:33
But when he had turned about and looked on his disciples, he rebuked Peter, saying, Get thee behind me, Satan: for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but the things that be of men.
Cross-reference
Mark 9:32 shows the disciples still misunderstanding Jesus' suffering, echoing Peter's human mindset that led to the rebuke here.
Genesis 3:4-6 shows Satan tempting Eve to disobey God — Peter’s suggestion to avoid the cross echoes that same temptation, hence 'Satan'.
2 Samuel 19:22 has David rebuking his men with 'Satan' (adversary) — same term Jesus uses for Peter when he opposes God's plan.
Matthew 4:10 records Jesus using the same phrase 'Away from me, Satan' against the devil — he now applies it to Peter as tempter.
Luke 9:55 records Jesus turning and rebuking his disciples for wanting to destroy Samaritans — a parallel instance of correcting human attitudes.
Romans 8:5-8 explicitly contrasts setting the mind on the flesh (human things) versus the Spirit, mirroring Jesus' rebuke of Peter's mindset.
Philippians 3:19 describes those 'with minds set on earthly things,' directly echoing Peter's human focus that Jesus condemns.
James 3:15-18 contrasts earthly, demonic wisdom with heavenly wisdom, providing a framework for Peter's human and satanic thinking in this verse.
1 John 2:15 warns against loving worldly things, reinforcing Jesus' call to set the mind on divine rather than human concerns.
Matthew 16:23 is the parallel account of the same rebuke, with identical wording about setting the mind on human things.
In John 21:19, Jesus foretells Peter's martyrdom — a stark contrast to Peter's earlier rejection of suffering. Peter will finally set his mind on God's things.
1 Peter 4:1 shows Peter later urging a mindset of suffering, contrasting with his earlier rejection of the cross that Jesus rebuked here.
Luke 4:8 shows Jesus resisting Satan’s temptation to worship him — parallel to rejecting Peter’s tempting suggestion to avoid suffering.
In Luke 9:45, disciples don't understand Jesus' death — the same lack of divine perspective Peter showed when rebuking Jesus.
Luke 22:61 records another turning of Jesus to look at Peter — a moment of confrontation that echoes this earlier rebuke.
Revelation 3:19 reveals that Jesus’ rebuke is motivated by love — the same loving correction seen here as he redirects Peter.