Ezekiel 45:17
And it shall be the prince’s part to give burnt offerings, and meat offerings, and drink offerings, in the feasts, and in the new moons, and in the sabbaths, in all solemnities of the house of Israel: he shall prepare the sin offering, and the meat offering, and the burnt offering, and the peace offerings, to make reconciliation for the house of Israel.
Cross-reference
Ezekiel 45:15 details a specific offering within the same context, showing the type of sacrifice the prince offers.
Ezekiel 46:4-12 specifies the offerings for Sabbaths and new moons that the prince must provide, directly expanding on the general command here.
In Ezekiel 43:27, the priests offer burnt offerings on the altar — this is the same temple ritual for which the prince provides the offerings in 45:17.
Ezekiel 46:1 describes the gate opening on sabbaths and new moons, the occasions for the prince's offerings in verse 17.
Ezekiel 46:12 expands on the prince's voluntary offerings, connecting to the prince's duty in verse 17.
Leviticus 23:1-44 lists the feasts of the Lord that Ezekiel references — establishing the calendar the prince must supply.
1 Kings 8:63 describes Solomon offering massive peace offerings at the temple dedication, paralleling the prince's duty to provide offerings for feasts.
1 Kings 8:64 shows Solomon consecrating extra space for offerings because the altar was too small—emphasizing the scale of royal provision for temple worship.
2 Chronicles 7:4 has the king and people offering sacrifices at the temple dedication, directly paralleling the prince's duty to provide offerings for feasts.
In 2 Chronicles 8:13, Solomon's offerings follow the same schedule of Sabbaths, new moons, and feasts that Ezekiel assigns to the prince.
In 2 Chronicles 31:3, Hezekiah provides burnt offerings for Sabbaths, new moons, and feasts, exactly mirroring the prince's provision in Ezekiel.
In Ezra 6:9, the Persian king orders daily provision of burnt offerings, directly mirroring the prince's duty in Ezekiel.
Colossians 2:16 dismisses judgment about new moons and sabbaths, which Ezekiel's vision still requires—a contrast between law and grace.
In 2 Chronicles 30:24, Hezekiah and princes provide large numbers of animals for Passover, echoing the prince's role in supplying sacrifices.
Numbers 28:11 prescribes the same new moon burnt offerings that the prince is to provide in Ezekiel's vision.
Isaiah 66:23 envisions worship from new moon to Sabbath — echoing the same sacred calendar Ezekiel mentions.
In 2 Chronicles 8:12, Solomon offers burnt offerings as king, paralleling the prince's duty to provide sacrifices in Ezekiel.