Matthew 9:22
But Jesus turned him about, and when he saw her, he said, Daughter, be of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole. And the woman was made whole from that hour.
Cross-references
In Matthew 9:2, Jesus sees the faith of the paralytic's friends and responds with healing — linking faith and healing as here.
In Matthew 9:29, Jesus heals blind men according to their faith — another instance where faith is the basis for healing.
Matthew 9:28 shows another healing where Jesus asks about belief — echoing the faith theme from the woman's healing.
Matthew 17:18 describes Jesus casting out a demon without mentioning the boy's faith — contrasting with this healing attributed to the woman's faith.
Mark 5:34 is the parallel account: Jesus says 'Daughter, your faith has healed you' — identical teaching in the same story.
Mark 10:52 records Jesus telling Bartimaeus, 'Your faith has healed you' — a thematic parallel of faith bringing healing.
In Luke 7:50, Jesus similarly tells a forgiven woman, 'Your faith has saved you; go in peace,' echoing the same declaration that faith brings salvation.
Luke 8:48 also records Jesus telling her, 'Daughter, your faith has healed you' — a synoptic parallel of this exact moment.
In Luke 17:19, Jesus uses the same phrase 'your faith has made you well' to the healed leper, reinforcing that faith is the means of healing.
In Luke 18:42, Jesus again says 'your faith has saved you' to the blind man, showing this as a recurring pattern in his healing ministry.
Acts 3:16 uses the same phrase 'faith has made well' for the lame man — a clear echo of Jesus' words to the woman.
John 4:53 shows the nobleman believing after his son's healing — a different sequence where faith follows healing rather than precedes it.
Acts 14:9 shows Paul perceiving that the crippled man had faith to be healed, illustrating the same link between faith and healing.
Hebrews 4:2 warns that the word did not benefit because it was not united by faith — the opposite of the woman's active faith here.