Ezekiel 40:6
Then came he unto the gate which looketh toward the east, and went up the stairs thereof, and measured the threshold of the gate, which was one reed broad; and the other threshold of the gate, which was one reed broad.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 40:5 introduces the measuring reed used to measure this gate — immediate context in the vision.
Ezekiel 40:7 details the guardrooms and posts of this same east gate — consecutive architectural description.
Ezekiel 40:20 measures the north gate with the same pattern, showing symmetry in the temple court.
Ezekiel 40:15 gives the total length of this east gate from entrance to inner porch.
Ezekiel 40:34 describes another gate with porches, pillars, and steps, mirroring the east gate's design in the same vision.
Ezekiel 40:22 describes the north gate with matching measurements — showing the symmetrical gate design.
Ezekiel 40:26 describes the south gate's steps and palm trees, mirroring the structure of the east gate in 40:6.
Ezekiel 40:24 describes the south gate with similar dimensions — part of the symmetrical gate layout.
Ezekiel 47:1 traces water flowing from under the threshold of the temple — the same threshold described here.
Ezekiel 46:12 describes the prince's exit via the east gate, applying the gate from 40:6 to specific rituals.
Ezekiel 46:2 shows the prince entering through this same east gate on Sabbaths — its ceremonial use.
Ezekiel 44:1 shows the east gate shut after the Lord's glory enters, fulfilling the significance of the gate measured in 40:6.
Ezekiel 43:1 returns to the east gate where the glory of the Lord enters, continuing the temple vision from 40:6 where the gate is measured.
In Ezekiel 42:15, the measuring ends at the east gate, tying back to the initial gate measurement and completing the circuit of the temple.
Ezekiel 46:1 regulates the inner east gate's opening, expanding the temple gate system introduced in 40:6.
Ezekiel 8:16 depicts sun worship at the temple, contrasting with the holy measurements here that restore proper worship.
Ezekiel 43:8 mentions the threshold defiled by sin — contrasting the holy threshold of the new temple here.
Ezekiel 11:1 locates corrupt leaders at the east gate, contrasting with the same gate being measured for restoration.