Revelation 22:9
Then saith he unto me, See thou do it not: for I am thy fellowservant, and of thy brethren the prophets, and of them which keep the sayings of this book: worship God.
Cross-reference
Revelation 22:7 pronounces blessing on those who keep the prophecy — the same group the angel identifies as fellow servants.
Revelation 19:10 records the same scene — the angel's identical command to worship God alone.
Revelation 15:4 declares that all nations will worship God alone — aligning with the angel's exclusive worship command.
Revelation 14:7 commands worship of the Creator — reinforcing the angel's directive to worship God alone.
Revelation 9:20 describes people worshiping demons and idols — the opposite of the exclusive worship commanded by the angel.
Revelation 4:10 shows the twenty-four elders worshiping God on the throne — exactly the worship the angel insists on here.
Revelation 7:11 shows angels worshiping God — consistent with the angel here redirecting worship to God alone.
Exodus 34:14 commands worship of no other god because the Lord is jealous — echoing the angel's call to worship only God.
Colossians 2:18 warns against angel worship — the angel here commands to worship God instead.
Matthew 4:9 records Satan demanding worship for himself — the direct opposite of the angel's refusal and command to worship God.
2 Kings 17:36 commands fearing and worshiping the Lord who brought Israel out of Egypt — the same exclusive worship the angel demands.
Acts 10:26 shows Peter rejecting worship, directly paralleling the angel's refusal — 'I too am a man' echoes the angel's self-identification as a fellow servant.
Acts 14:15 has Paul and Barnabas reject worship, calling themselves men of like nature — parallels the angel's claim to be a fellow servant of God.
Luke 4:8 directly states the command to worship God alone, the same principle the angel invokes in Revelation when refusing worship.
Matthew 8:2 shows a leper worshipping Jesus without rebuke, contrasting with the angel who forbids worship — highlighting Jesus' divine identity.
Psalm 103:21 calls angels to bless the Lord, showing they are fellow worshippers, just as the angel calls himself a fellow servant.
In Joshua 5:14, Joshua worships the commander of the Lord's army without rebuke, contrasting with the angel's refusal of worship in Revelation.
Exodus 20:3 commands no other gods, the foundation for the angel's instruction to worship God only.
Acts 10:25 records Cornelius worshipping Peter — a parallel situation where a creature receives worship, setting up the need for correction.
Deuteronomy 4:19 forbids worshiping heavenly bodies — same principle of worshiping the Creator, not creation.