Exodus 12:43

And the Lord said unto Moses and Aaron, This is the ordinance of the passover: There shall no stranger eat thereof:

Cross-reference

Exodus 12:48 gives the ruling for foreigners keeping Passover, directly expanding the statute in this verse.

Exodus 12:19 applies the leaven prohibition to both sojourner and native, contrasting with the foreigner ban on Passover itself.

Exodus 12:14 Historical context

Exodus 12:14 establishes the Passover as a perpetual memorial, providing the context for the restriction in verse 43.

Exodus 23:15 Historical context

Exodus 23:15 commands the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which is the same festival as the Passover in Exodus 12:43.

Numbers 9:14 permits sojourners who follow the Passover statute to participate, clarifying the rule in Exodus 12:43.

Numbers 9:12 Historical context

Numbers 9:12 insists the delayed Passover follows all original statutes, reinforcing the rules from Exodus 12.

2 Chronicles 30:25 includes sojourners in Passover — directly opposing the exclusion of foreigners commanded in Exodus 12:43.

Numbers 9:11 Historical context

Numbers 9:11 allows a delayed Passover for the unclean, supplementing the original Passover rules in Exodus 12.

Numbers 15:15 declares one statute for native and sojourner in offerings, contrasting with the Passover's exclusion of foreigners.

Ephesians 2:12 describes Gentiles as 'strangers' to Israel's covenants, mirroring the foreigner's exclusion from the Passover.

2 Chronicles 30:18 shows unclean Israelites eating Passover by pardon — similar concern about qualified participants, but for a different group.

Leviticus 22:10 applies a similar restriction on holy food to non-priests, paralleling the Passover exclusion of foreigners.