Exodus 40:35

And Moses was not able to enter into the tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle.

Cross-reference

In Leviticus 16:2, God warns that entering the Most Holy Place without proper atonement brings death — the same cloud of glory that prevents Moses from entering here.

In 1 Kings 8:11, the same cloud of God's glory fills Solomon's temple, so the priests cannot stand to minister — mirroring Moses' inability to enter here.

In 2 Chronicles 5:14, the same cloud of glory fills the temple, preventing priests from ministering — a direct parallel to Moses' inability to enter here.

In 2 Chronicles 7:2, the same glory of the Lord fills the temple, preventing priests from entering — echoing Moses' inability to enter the tabernacle here.

In Revelation 15:8, the heavenly temple fills with smoke from God's glory, so no one can enter — directly echoing the cloud preventing Moses from entering here.

In Numbers 16:42, the cloud covers the tent and glory appears—same divine presence that prevented Moses from entering the tabernacle.

2 Chronicles 5:13 shows the cloud filling the temple so priests could not stand—a direct parallel to the glory filling the tabernacle.

In 2 Chronicles 7:1, fire and glory fill the temple, paralleling the cloud and glory that filled the tabernacle at its dedication.

Ezekiel 10:4 describes the glory of the Lord filling the temple with cloud, directly mirroring the tabernacle filling.

Matthew 17:5 has a bright cloud and divine voice at the transfiguration, echoing God's glory presence in the tabernacle.

Isaiah 6:4 Parallel

In Isaiah 6:4, the temple fills with smoke at God's presence — similar to the cloud of glory filling the tabernacle here, signaling divine holiness.

Ezekiel 8:4 Parallel

Ezekiel 8:4 shows the same 'glory of the God of Israel' in a vision, echoing the glory that filled the tabernacle.

Haggai 2:7 Parallel

Haggai 2:7 promises God will again fill his house with glory, recalling the tabernacle's filling.

Leviticus 1:1 Historical context

In Leviticus 1:1, God speaks to Moses from the tent of meeting — the same tabernacle Moses cannot enter here because of the cloud of glory.

In 2 Samuel 7:6, God reminds Israel He dwelt in a tent, recalling the mobile tabernacle where His glory filled the space.

In 1 Chronicles 17:6, God says He moved in a tent, echoing the tabernacle where His glory once settled.