Ezekiel 41:1
Afterward he brought me to the temple, and measured the posts, six cubits broad on the one side, and six cubits broad on the other side, which was the breadth of the tabernacle.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 40:3 introduces the man with a measuring line who later measures the temple in 41:1, linking the narrative directly.
Ezekiel 42:1 continues the measuring tour, moving from the nave to the outer court in the same vision sequence.
Ezekiel 11:1 also shows the prophet brought to the temple by the Spirit, linking both visionary tours of God's house.
Ezekiel 40:2 sets the vision's start on a high mountain, providing the context for the temple measurements in 41:1.
Ezekiel 40:17 records the measuring of the outer court, leading to the temple measurements in 41:1 as the vision progresses.
Revelation 11:1 directly parallels this by having John measure the temple — the same symbolic act of claiming God's dwelling.
In Revelation 21:15, the angel measures the New Jerusalem — mirroring Ezekiel's temple measurements, showing the heavenly counterpart.
1 Kings 6:2 records Solomon's temple dimensions — the vision here follows the same pattern but for a future temple.
Ephesians 2:20-22 describes the church as a holy temple built on Christ — the physical temple here is a type of that spiritual building.
1 Peter 2:5 calls believers 'living stones' built into a spiritual house — this measured temple prefigures that spiritual building.
Revelation 3:12 promises overcomers a place as a pillar in God's temple — the pillars measured here symbolize steadfast believers.