Cross References
Forty authors. Fifteen centuries. One unbroken thread.
Scripture interprets Scripture. Hundreds of thousands of cross-references — prophecy and fulfillment, type and antitype, quotation and echo — bind Genesis to Revelation into a single story. Pull any thread and follow it.
- 66
- books
- 1,189
- chapters
- 31,102
- verses
- 40+
- authors
- ~1,500
- years of writing
- 1
- unbroken story
Begin with a thread
Six threads worth pulling.
Each one opens in the explorer, seeded at its source. Follow it as far as it goes.
God will provide himself a lamb
Abraham answers Isaac on Mount Moriah. Two thousand years later, John the Baptist points across the Jordan: "Behold the Lamb of God."
Trace this threadThe cry written a millennium early
David's psalm of abandonment — pierced hands, cast lots, mocking crowds — becomes the script of the crucifixion, word for word.
Trace this threadThe Servant, quoted by an eyewitness
Isaiah's Suffering Servant, written seven centuries before the cross, quoted as fulfilled by a man who watched it happen.
Trace this threadTwo openings, one Word
The Bible's first sentence and the fourth Gospel's first sentence begin with the same three words — on purpose.
Trace this threadThe verse the New Testament quotes most
"The LORD said unto my Lord" — quoted or echoed more than twenty times, from Jesus's own riddle to the priesthood of Melchizedek.
Trace this threadThe prophecy read out as news
At Pentecost, Peter stands before the crowd and reads Joel — not as an ancient text, but as the morning's headline.
Trace this threadThe whole Bible, woven in one light.
Every connection between every chapter, drawn at once — then choose a book and read where it reaches. No committee planned this. Forty authors, fifteen centuries, one woven book.
Weaving…
Gold threads leap between the Testaments. Tap any book to drill into its chapters and verses — the whole Bible stays in view.
Why this matters
Scripture interprets Scripture.
The Bible was written by more than forty authors — shepherds, kings, fishermen, physicians, scholars, prisoners — across roughly fifteen hundred years, on three continents, in three languages. None of them saw the finished canon. And yet the book quotes itself, answers itself, and completes its own sentences across centuries: a question raised on Mount Moriah is answered at the Jordan; a psalm of abandonment becomes the script of an execution a thousand years later.
Cross-references are how readers have traced that coherence for centuries. A prophecy points forward to its fulfillment. A type — the Passover lamb, the bronze serpent, the temple — casts a shadow that a later passage names. A quotation picks up an earlier voice and carries it further. Follow enough of these threads and the structure stops looking like an anthology and starts looking like architecture.
That is what this page is for. The explorer above doesn't tell you what to conclude — it shows you the connections and lets you read every verse in context. The pattern speaks for itself.