Leviticus 14:2
This shall be the law of the leper in the day of his cleansing: He shall be brought unto the priest:
Cross-reference
Leviticus 14:54-57 summarizes the entire law of leprosy, providing the context for the cleansing ritual introduced in verse 2.
Leviticus 14:32 provides for a poor leper's cleansing, a specific application of the general law in verse 2.
Leviticus 22:4 applies the leprosy cleansing law to priests, forbidding them from eating holy things until clean.
Leviticus 13:59 states the law for diagnosing leprosy, complementing the cleansing law in 14:2.
Leviticus 15:32 concludes the law about bodily discharges, another purification law similar in structure to the leprosy law in 14:2.
Matthew 8:2-4 recounts Jesus healing a leper and instructing him to follow the Mosaic law, directly referencing Leviticus 14:2.
Mark 1:40-44 parallels Matthew 8:2-4; Jesus commands the healed leper to follow the Levitical law from Leviticus 14:2.
Luke 5:12-14 also records Jesus directing the healed leper to obey the law in Leviticus 14:2.
Luke 17:14 recounts Jesus telling ten lepers to show themselves to the priests, following the cleansing law of Leviticus 14:2.
In Matthew 8:4, Jesus cites this law — the healed leper must show himself to the priest — as part of his own healing command.
In Mark 1:44, Jesus similarly directs the healed leper to offer what Moses commanded, reinforcing this same ceremonial law.