Ezekiel 40:5
And behold a wall on the outside of the house round about, and in the man’s hand a measuring reed of six cubits long by the cubit and an hand breadth: so he measured the breadth of the building, one reed; and the height, one reed.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 40:6, the same measuring reed is used to measure the east gate, continuing the detailed temple survey.
Ezekiel 40:10 extends the measurement to the gate's side chambers using the same reed, expanding the structural description.
In Ezekiel 42:20, the same wall is measured as separating holy from common—completing the boundary description begun here.
Ezekiel 43:13 specifies the altar measurements also use the long cubit (cubit plus handbreadth), applying the same standard.
In Ezekiel 41:8, the height of the side chambers is six cubits, matching the reed's length, confirming consistency in the vision.
In Revelation 21:12, the New Jerusalem's measured wall and gates echo Ezekiel's temple vision, showing the OT type fulfilled in the heavenly city.
In Zechariah 2:1, a man with a measuring line appears to measure Jerusalem, paralleling Ezekiel's measuring reed for the temple.