Revelation 20:5

But the rest of the dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection.

Cross-reference

Revelation 20:6 expands on the first resurrection, describing the blessing and reign of those who share in it.

In Rev 11:11, the two witnesses are resurrected after three and a half days, prefiguring the first resurrection of the saints in Rev 20:5.

Revelation 11:18 speaks of rewarding God's servants — the first resurrection is when they receive that reward.

In Rev 19:20, the beast and false prophet are thrown into the lake of fire before the millennium, contrasting with the first resurrection of the saints.

In Ezekiel 37:2-14, dry bones come to life as a national restoration, typifying the first resurrection of the saints in Rev 20:5.

Isaiah 26:19 promises resurrection for God's people — the same hope embodied in the first resurrection here.

John 11:25 Parallel

John 11:25 identifies Jesus as the resurrection — the basis for believers experiencing the first resurrection here.

1 Thessalonians 4:16 describes the 'dead in Christ' rising first — matching the first resurrection here.

Ezekiel 37:10 depicts dry bones coming to life — a type of the resurrection seen here as the first resurrection.

Isaiah 26:14 declares the wicked dead never rise — contrasting with Revelation where the rest of the dead come to life after the millennium.

In Romans 11:15, Paul calls Israel's restoration 'life from the dead' — a metaphor that parallels the literal first resurrection in Rev 20:5.