Matthew 22:44
The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou on my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy footstool?
Cross-reference
1 Corinthians 15:25 alludes to Psalm 110:1, applying the 'enemies under feet' to Christ's reign until the end.
Revelation 20:11-15 portrays the final judgment where death itself is thrown into the lake of fire — the ultimate enemy placed under Christ's feet.
Revelation 20:1-3 shows Satan being bound — a specific enemy subdued under Christ's authority, echoing 'enemies under your feet'.
Revelation 19:19-21 depicts the final battle where Christ's enemies are destroyed — fulfillment of the 'enemies under your feet' promise.
Hebrews 12:2 echoes the session at God's right hand, adding that Christ endured the cross before that exaltation.
In Hebrews 10:13, this same Psalm 110:1 is quoted, emphasizing Christ waiting until His enemies become a footstool.
Hebrews 10:12 alludes to Psalm 110:1 with Christ sitting at God's right hand after his sacrifice.
Hebrews 1:13 directly quotes Psalm 110:1 in full, reinforcing the same messianic proof text.
In Genesis 3:15, the serpent's head is crushed—the ultimate enemy defeat that the footstool imagery anticipates.
Acts 2:35 continues the quote of Psalm 110:1, completing 'until I make your enemies a footstool'.
Acts 2:34 also quotes Psalm 110:1, showing the early church used the same verse to argue Christ's exaltation.
In Luke 19:27, the king's enemies are slaughtered — directly illustrating the 'enemies under your feet' promise from Psalm 110:1.
Psalm 110:1 is the exact verse Jesus quotes — the source of his question about David calling Messiah Lord.
Psalm 2:9 describes breaking nations with a rod of iron, directly paralleling the enemies made a footstool.
Colossians 3:1 explicitly mentions Christ 'seated at the right hand of God' — the same position from Psalm 110:1, applied to believers' heavenly focus.
Luke 22:69 echoes the 'seated at the right hand' imagery — Jesus applies the Psalm to his own exaltation, confirming his identity.
Luke 20:42 records the same quotation of Psalm 110:1 — a parallel account of Jesus' argument about David's Lord.
1 Peter 3:22 echoes the same Psalm 110:1 — Jesus is now at God's right hand, confirming his Lordship.
Psalm 2:8 promises the Messiah the nations as inheritance, complementing the enemy subjugation in Psalm 110:1.