Ezekiel 44:4
Then brought he me the way of the north gate before the house: and I looked, and, behold, the glory of the Lord filled the house of the Lord: and I fell upon my face.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 1:28, the prophet falls on his face at the sight of God's glory — the same response repeated here when glory fills the temple.
Ezekiel 3:23 also has Ezekiel falling facedown at the appearance of God's glory, mirroring his response here.
Ezekiel 10:18 shows the glory departing the temple, contrasting with its return here.
Ezekiel 11:23 shows glory leaving Jerusalem to the east mountain, opposite of filling the temple.
Ezekiel 40:20 measures the north gate, which is the same gate Ezekiel passes through in this vision.
Ezekiel 43:3 records the same vision of glory filling the temple and Ezekiel falling on his face, directly linking the two scenes.
Ezekiel 43:4 describes the glory entering the temple by the east gate, leading to its filling here.
Ezekiel 43:5 records the same event: 'the glory of the LORD filled the temple' — identical wording.
Ezekiel 8:14 shows women weeping for Tammuz in the temple, contrasting the defilement then with the glory now filling it.
In Ezekiel 47:2, water flows from the temple threshold, depicting life from the same temple whose glory filled it here.
Ezekiel 40:40 describes tables near the north gate, part of the same temple layout Ezekiel sees here.
In Revelation 1:17, John falls as dead before the glorified Christ — mirroring Ezekiel's response to divine glory in the temple.
1 Kings 8:11 reports that the glory of the LORD filled Solomon's temple — the same phrase used here when it fills Ezekiel's vision.
2 Chronicles 7:1 also describes the glory filling the temple at dedication — a parallel event to the glory filling in this vision.
Isaiah 6:4 describes smoke filling the temple — a symbol of divine presence like the glory here.