Leviticus 13:10

And the priest shall see him: and, behold, if the rising be white in the skin, and it have turned the hair white, and there be quick raw flesh in the rising;

Cross-references

Leviticus 13:3 lists similar symptoms of leprosy — white hair and depth — reinforcing the diagnosis here.

Leviticus 13:4 describes a case without raw flesh — contrasting with the clear leprosy here where raw flesh appears.

Leviticus 13:14 specifies that raw flesh makes one unclean — the same sign mentioned here as key to leprosy.

Leviticus 13:15 specifies that raw flesh indicates leprosy, completing the diagnostic criteria introduced here.

Leviticus 13:24 gives another case (a burn) with similar symptoms, extending the diagnostic rules for skin diseases.

Numbers 12:10-12 records Miriam's leprosy 'white as snow' — a narrative illustration of the condition described here.

2 Kings 5:27 shows Gehazi struck with leprosy 'white as snow' — a direct narrative parallel to this diagnosis.

2 Chronicles 26:19 describes King Uzziah's leprosy breaking out — a historical example of the disease described here.

2 Chronicles 26:20 records the priests seeing the leprosy on Uzziah's forehead — continuing the narrative parallel.