Romans 4:24
But for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead;
Cross-reference
Romans 4:6 quotes David about being blessed whose righteousness is counted apart from works — the same imputation doctrine unfolding in Romans 4:24.
Romans 4:5 earlier states the same principle: faith is counted as righteousness for the one who believes in God who justifies the ungodly.
Romans 10:10 clarifies that heart belief leads to righteousness—exactly the imputed righteousness Paul describes in Romans 4:24.
Romans 10:9 explicitly links belief in the resurrection to salvation, directly reinforcing the condition for receiving righteousness in Romans 4:24.
In Romans 8:11, the same phrase 'raised up Jesus from the dead' connects to God's power to also raise our mortal bodies.
1 Peter 1:21 directly parallels this: believers trust in God who raised Jesus from the dead, giving glory. Same core affirmation of resurrection faith.
Hebrews 13:20 describes God bringing Jesus from the dead, the same act believers trust in for righteousness in Romans 4:24.
Ephesians 1:18-20 highlights the power of God in raising Christ, connecting to the faith in that resurrection for believers.
Acts 13:30 simply states 'God raised him from the dead,' matching the resurrection clause in Romans 4:24.
Acts 2:24 declares God raised Jesus from the dead, directly affirming the object of faith in Romans 4:24.
John 3:14-16 promises eternal life to all who believe in the Son, paralleling the imputed righteousness for those who believe in the resurrection.
Acts 20:21 summarizes Paul's testimony of faith in Jesus — the same faith in Christ that Romans 4:24 links to being counted righteous.
Acts 13:39 declares that everyone who believes is freed from what the law could not free — same justification by faith apart from works as Romans 4:24.
Acts 10:40 states God raised Jesus on the third day — the exact event that Romans 4:24 presents as the object of saving faith.
1 Corinthians 15:13 argues that if no resurrection, Christ is not risen — a logical extension of the resurrection belief here.
Galatians 1:1 also mentions God the Father who raised Jesus from the dead — identical phrasing.
Galatians 2:16 teaches justification by faith, not works — the same doctrine of faith that Romans 4:24 builds on.
Galatians 3:6 quotes 'Abraham believed God and it was counted as righteousness,' the very verse Paul uses in Romans 4.
Galatians 3:7 identifies those of faith as children of Abraham — the same identity for believers in Romans 4:24.
Galatians 3:9 says those of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham — a direct echo of the blessing for believers.
Colossians 2:12 connects faith in God who raised Christ to baptism and resurrection — identical theme.
John 2:19 records Jesus' prophecy of raising the temple (his body) in three days — the resurrection event that Romans 4:24 says we believe in.
Acts 2:39 extends the promise to 'all who are far off,' mirroring Paul's point that righteousness is for all who believe, not only Abraham.
Isaiah 53:11 describes the Servant making many righteous — the same imputed righteousness concept that Romans 4:24 applies to believers through resurrection faith.