Leviticus 17:6

And the priest shall sprinkle the blood upon the altar of the Lord at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and burn the fat for a sweet savour unto the Lord.

Cross-reference

Leviticus 3:2 specifies the blood-throwing ritual for peace offerings, exactly the action commanded in this verse.

In Leviticus 3:5, the burning of fat as a pleasing aroma mirrors the same action described in 17:6.

Leviticus 3:8 repeats the blood-throwing procedure for a different kind of peace offering, reinforcing the same ritual.

Leviticus 3:11 specifies burning the fat as a food offering, identical to the burning in 17:6.

Leviticus 3:16 reinforces that all fat is burned as a pleasing aroma, directly matching the action in 17:6.

Leviticus 4:31 describes burning the fat for a pleasing aroma in the sin offering, a parallel ritual to 17:6.

In Leviticus 3:13, the priest throws blood against the altar for the peace offering, similar to the sprinkling of blood in 17:6.

Leviticus 7:23 prohibits eating fat, the very fat burned in 17:6, explaining why it is offered to God.

In Exodus 29:13, the burning of fat during priestly consecration parallels the burning of fat in 17:6.

Numbers 18:17 directly echoes the sprinkling of blood and burning of fat for a pleasing aroma, mirroring Leviticus 17:6.

Exodus 29:18 describes a whole burnt offering as a pleasing aroma, similar to the pleasing aroma from burning fat in 17:6.