Leviticus 2:4
And if thou bring an oblation of a meat offering baken in the oven, it shall be unleavened cakes of fine flour mingled with oil, or unleavened wafers anointed with oil.
Cross-references
Leviticus 2:1 gives the general grain offering of fine flour and oil — this verse specifies the baked form in the oven.
In Leviticus 2:16, the memorial portion of this same grain offering is burned, completing the ritual instructions.
Leviticus 6:17 reinforces that the grain offering must not be baked with yeast—the same prohibition given here, now applied to the priests' portion.
Leviticus 7:12 uses identical language for unleavened loaves mixed with oil in the thanksgiving offering, directly echoing the recipe here.
Leviticus 10:12 refers to leftover grain offering that is unleavened and most holy, applying the same unleavened requirement from here.
In Leviticus 5:11, the sin offering of flour must omit oil, contrasting the oil required in this grain offering.
In Leviticus 7:9, this baked grain offering is assigned to the priest, clarifying its distribution.
Exodus 29:2 prescribes almost identical unleavened wafers with oil — a parallel instruction for offerings.
1 Chronicles 23:29 lists fine flour, wafers, and oil for grain offerings, matching Leviticus 2:4 exactly.
In Numbers 6:15, the Nazirite offering includes the same unleavened loaves with oil, echoing the grain offering recipe.
In Judges 6:19, Gideon’s offering of unleavened bread mirrors this grain offering, showing practical observance.
Ezekiel 46:20 specifies the location for baking the grain offering—inside the temple precincts—echoing the baking instructions here.