Ezekiel 10:4
Then the glory of the Lord went up from the cherub, and stood over the threshold of the house; and the house was filled with the cloud, and the court was full of the brightness of the Lord’s glory.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 10:18 records the next step: the glory departs from the threshold after moving there in verse 4.
Ezekiel 1:28 describes the appearance of the glory of the LORD — the same divine manifestation now moving in the temple here.
Ezekiel 9:3 earlier records the glory moving to the threshold — verse 10:4 describes the same movement with added detail.
Ezekiel 11:23 concludes the departure: the glory leaves the city entirely, after moving to the threshold in verse 4.
In Ezekiel 11:23, the glory departs from the city to the mountain, completing the judgment scene begun when it rose to the threshold in 10:4.
In Ezekiel 43:5, the glory fills the temple again in the restoration vision, contrasting with the departure and judgment scene here.
Ezekiel 43:2 describes the glory of the LORD returning from the east to fill the temple—a later vision of the same glory's movement.
Ezekiel 44:4 explicitly states the glory of the LORD filled the temple—identical to the scene here. Very strong parallel.
In Exodus 40:35, the glory fills the tabernacle with a cloud so Moses cannot enter, mirroring the same filling and inaccessibility here.
In Numbers 16:19, the glory appears at the tent of meeting during Korah's rebellion, a similar theophany of divine presence in judgment.
In 1 Kings 8:10-12, the cloud fills Solomon's temple at its dedication, identical imagery of the glory filling the house.
In 2 Chronicles 5:14, the priests cannot stand because of the cloud, directly continuing the scene of glory filling the temple.
In Revelation 15:8, the temple in heaven is filled with smoke from God's glory, no one entering until the plagues end, echoing this scene.