Ezekiel 46:13

Thou shalt daily prepare a burnt offering unto the Lord of a lamb of the first year without blemish: thou shalt prepare it every morning.

Cross-reference

Exodus 12:5 Parallel

In Exodus 12:5, the same lamb specification (without blemish, a year old) is given for the Passover, showing consistent sacrificial standards.

In Exodus 29:38-42, the daily burnt offering of a lamb is instituted; Ezekiel 46:13 reinstates this same daily lamb offering for the restored temple.

In Daniel 8:11-13, the daily sacrifice ('tamid') is taken away; this is the same daily lamb offering commanded in Ezekiel 46:13.

John 1:29 Typology

In John 1:29, Jesus is called 'the Lamb of God who takes away sin'—the daily lamb in Ezekiel 46:13 prefigures Him.

In 1 Peter 1:19, Christ is described as 'a lamb without blemish or spot,' directly echoing the unblemished lamb of Ezekiel 46:13.

In Revelation 13:8, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world is Christ; the daily lamb in Ezekiel 46:13 foreshadows this ultimate sacrifice.

In Exodus 29:39, the same instruction to offer a lamb in the morning establishes the daily burnt offering pattern.

1 Chronicles 16:40 Historical context

In 1 Chronicles 16:40, the practice of morning and evening burnt offerings is recorded as obedience to the Law.

In Exodus 29:41, the evening lamb offering completes the daily sacrifice cycle referenced in this morning command.

In Numbers 28:3-8, the daily offering involves two lambs (morning and evening); Ezekiel 46:13 prescribes only one lamb each morning, a modification.