Leviticus 2:2

And he shall bring it to Aaron’s sons the priests: and he shall take thereout his handful of the flour thereof, and of the oil thereof, with all the frankincense thereof; and the priest shall burn the memorial of it upon the altar, to be an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the Lord:

Cross-references

Leviticus 2:9 restates the memorial portion burning, identical to the procedure in 2:2, reinforcing the grain offering ritual.

In Leviticus 2:7, the grain offering baked on a griddle is a specific preparation method within the same offering category.

In Leviticus 2:16, the memorial portion is repeated for the firstfruit grain offering, reinforcing the same ritual pattern.

Leviticus 5:12 uses the same memorial portion procedure for a sin offering of flour, applying the grain offering ritual to atonement.

Leviticus 6:15 elaborates on the memorial portion from the grain offering, repeating the instructions with more detail.

In Leviticus 5:11, the sin offering grain offering omits oil and frankincense, directly contrasting with the requirements here.

In Leviticus 6:14, the law of the grain offering expands on the instructions for the same offering.

Leviticus 9:17 shows Aaron performing exactly this ritual — taking a handful from the grain offering and burning it on the altar.

Leviticus 24:7 places frankincense on showbread as a memorial, similar to the grain offering's memorial portion.

Acts 10:4 Typology

In Acts 10:4, Cornelius's prayers and alms ascend as a memorial before God, applying the memorial offering concept to acts of devotion.

Numbers 5:18 involves a memorial offering for jealousy, which is a grain offering like Leviticus 2:2, linking the ritual to a specific test.

Numbers 5:26 uses the same 'handful of memorial' from the grain offering in the jealousy ritual — a different application.

Numbers 18:9 states the grain offering is most holy and given to the priests — linking to the memorial portion burned here.