Ezekiel 45:1

Moreover, when ye shall divide by lot the land for inheritance, ye shall offer an oblation unto the Lord, an holy portion of the land: the length shall be the length of five and twenty thousand reeds, and the breadth shall be ten thousand. This shall be holy in all the borders thereof round about.

Cross-reference

Ezekiel 45:2-7 details the dimensions and uses of the holy district introduced in this verse—direct continuation.

Ezekiel 45:5 specifies the Levites' portion within the holy district, clarifying the allocation from verse 1.

Ezekiel 45:6 assigns the city's portion within the holy district, completing the distribution from verse 1.

Ezekiel 45:4 specifies that this holy district is for the priests and their houses, detailing the purpose of the area described in the main verse.

Ezekiel 47:21 commands dividing the land among tribes—the same allocation plan introduced here, completing the vision.

Ezekiel 48:8-23 describes the sacred portion for priests and Levites, expanding on the holy district command here.

Ezekiel 48:29 summarizes the tribal inheritance allotments, directly continuing the land division command from here.

Ezekiel 48:15 describes the common area for the city, contrasting with the holy district here. Both belong to the land allocation plan.

Numbers 34:13 records Moses commanding land division by lot—the same inheritance principle applied earlier to Canaan.

Joshua 14:2 Parallel

Joshua 14:2 describes inheritance by lot as commanded by Moses—further example of the land division process here.

Zechariah 14:20 envisions 'Holy to the Lord' on everyday items, extending the holiness of this sacred district to all life.

Zechariah 14:21 continues that vision, declaring even common pots holy—echoing the pervasive holiness of the district.

Numbers 35:2 commands giving Levites towns and pastures—like here, land set apart for sacred service.