Acts 14:6 Cross References
Acts 14:6
6: When the apostles learned of it, they fled for their lives. They went to the region of Lycaonia, to the cities of Lystra and Derbe and the surrounding area,
2 Timothy 3:11
- You know how much persecution and suffering I have endured. You know all about how I was persecuted in Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra--but the Lord delivered me from all of it.
Matthew 10:23
- When you are persecuted in one town, flee to the next. I assure you that I, the Son of Man, will return before you have reached all the towns of Israel.
Acts 14:20
- But as the believers stood around him, he got up and went back into the city. The next day he left with Barnabas for Derbe.
- After preaching the Good News in Derbe and making many disciples, Paul and Barnabas returned again to Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch of Pisidia,
Acts 9:24
- But Saul was told about their plot, and that they were watching for him day and night at the city gate so they could murder him.
2 Kings 6:8
- When the king of Aram was at war with Israel, he would confer with his officers and say, "We will mobilize our forces at such and such a place."
- But immediately Elisha, the man of God, would warn the king of Israel, "Do not go near that place, for the Arameans are planning to mobilize their troops there."
- So the king of Israel would send word to the place indicated by the man of God, warning the people there to be on their guard. This happened several times.
- The king of Aram became very upset over this. He called in his officers and demanded, "Which of you is the traitor? Who has been informing the king of Israel of my plans?"
- "It's not us, my lord," one of the officers replied. "Elisha, the prophet in Israel, tells the king of Israel even the words you speak in the privacy of your bedroom!"
Acts 16:1
- Paul and Silas went first to Derbe and then on to Lystra. There they met Timothy, a young disciple whose mother was a Jewish believer, but whose father was a Greek.
- Timothy was well thought of by the believers in Lystra and Iconium,
Acts 17:13
- But when some Jews in Thessalonica learned that Paul was preaching the word of God in Berea, they went there and stirred up trouble.
- The believers acted at once, sending Paul on to the coast, while Silas and Timothy remained behind.
Acts 23:12
- The next morning a group of Jews got together and bound themselves with an oath to neither eat nor drink until they had killed Paul.
- There were more than forty of them.
- They went to the leading priests and other leaders and told them what they had done. "We have bound ourselves under oath to neither eat nor drink until we have killed Paul.
- You and the high council should tell the commander to bring Paul back to the council again," they requested. "Pretend you want to examine his case more fully. We will kill him on the way."
- But Paul's nephew heard of their plan and went to the fortress and told Paul.