Romans 13:9
For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.
Cross-references
Romans 7:7 quotes the same 'do not covet' commandment, showing Paul's use of that specific command to illustrate sin's awakening.
Exodus 20:12-17 is the Decalogue Paul cites here — the specific commandments he says are summed up by loving your neighbor.
In James 2:8-10, the same love command is cited, and breaking one part makes you guilty of all — reinforcing Paul's point that love fulfills the law.
Luke 18:20 similarly lists the commandments Jesus recites, omitting covetousness and including 'honor parents' and 'do not bear false witness'.
Luke 10:27 includes 'love your neighbor as yourself' as part of the lawyer's answer about inheriting eternal life — parallel usage.
Mark 12:31 has Jesus quoting the love command as second greatest — identical to Paul's summary here.
Mark 10:19 lists the same Decalogue commandments Jesus affirms, adding 'do not defraud' and 'honor parents' — a parallel summary of moral law.
Matthew 22:39 records Jesus quoting the same Leviticus love command as the second great commandment — a parallel citation.
Matthew 19:19 includes 'love your neighbor as yourself' — the exact summary Paul uses here to show all commandments are fulfilled by love.
Deuteronomy 5:16-21 gives the parallel version of the Ten Commandments Paul references when he sums up the law with love.
Leviticus 19:18 is the direct source of the 'love your neighbor as yourself' command Paul cites to summarize the law.
In Matthew 22:40, Jesus teaches that all the Law and Prophets depend on love — a direct parallel to Paul's claim that love fulfills the law.
Deuteronomy 5:21 is the 'You shall not covet' command from the Decalogue, directly cited by Paul in his list.
Deuteronomy 5:19 is the parallel version of 'You shall not steal' from the Deuteronomic Decalogue, quoted by Paul.
Exodus 20:13 is the original 'You shall not murder' commandment that Paul directly quotes in his list.
James 2:11 cites the same two commandments (adultery and murder) to argue that breaking one makes you a lawbreaker — reinforcing Paul's point.
1 John 4:21 commands that loving God requires loving your brother — a direct parallel to Paul's love-neighbor principle as the law's fulfillment.
2 John 1:6 defines love as walking according to God's commandments — echoing Paul's idea that love fulfills the law.
In Luke 3:14, John tells soldiers not to extort or falsely accuse — a practical application of not stealing and being content, similar to Paul's list.
Galatians 5:13 calls believers to serve one another through love — a thematic parallel to the love-summary Paul gives here.
In Genesis 44:8, Joseph's brothers protest they would never steal — a narrative example of honoring the 'do not steal' command Paul lists.