Matthew 8:13
And Jesus said unto the centurion, Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee. And his servant was healed in the selfsame hour.
Cross-reference
Matthew 15:28 repeats the pattern: a Gentile woman's great faith results in an instantaneous long-distance healing of her daughter.
Matthew 9:29 uses the same 'according to your faith' formula, but here Jesus heals by touch, not at a distance — same principle, different context.
Matthew 17:20 generalizes faith's power to move mountains — a broader principle than the specific healing, but still rooted in belief.
Mark 7:29 shows Jesus healing a Gentile's child at a distance based on her faith — the same pattern as the centurion's servant.
John 4:50 records Jesus healing the official's son from a distance after the man believed His word — identical faith-at-a-distance dynamic.
Luke 7:10 gives the identical account of the centurion's servant being healed, confirming the miracle.
In Luke 8:48, Jesus attributes healing to the woman's faith, echoing the centurion's faith that healed his servant.
Mark 9:23 states 'all things are possible for one who believes' — a general faith claim that underlies the centurion’s specific healing.
John 4:52 confirms the exact hour the healing occurred — verifying that the word spoken at a distance took effect instantly, as in Matthew.
John 4:53 records the father's belief triggered by the healing — a different sequence (belief after the fact) but still ties faith to the distant miracle.