Leviticus 22:9

They shall therefore keep mine ordinance, lest they bear sin for it, and die therefore, if they profane it: I the Lord do sanctify them.

Cross-reference

Leviticus 22:15 reinforces the command not to profane holy things, echoing the warning about bearing sin in 22:9.

Leviticus 22:16 specifies the consequence of eating holy things unlawfully — bearing guilt — directly continuing the thought of 22:9.

In Leviticus 10:1, Nadab and Abihu offer unauthorized fire, illustrating the guilt and death warned against for treating God's commands with contempt.

In Leviticus 10:2, fire from the LORD consumes them, directly showing the death penalty warned in Lev 22:9 for disregarding holy requirements.

In Leviticus 16:2, Aaron is warned not to enter the Most Holy Place freely or he will die—same principle of death for not keeping God's holiness rules.

In Leviticus 10:3, God declares He will be proved holy among those who approach Him, reinforcing the deadly seriousness of Lev 22:9's command.

In Exodus 28:43, priests must wear proper garments to avoid guilt and die—identical phrasing to Lev 22:9's warning about incurring guilt and death.

Numbers 18:1 explicitly tells Aaron that priests shall bear iniquity for the sanctuary, directly paralleling the priestly responsibility in Lev 22:9.

In Exodus 29:44, God consecrates priests and tabernacle, grounding Lev 22:9's statement that the LORD makes them holy—the basis for holy requirements.

In Numbers 18:22, laypeople who approach the tent of meeting will bear sin and die, paralleling the death penalty for unauthorized access in Lev 22:9.

Numbers 9:13 applies the same 'bear his sin' principle to neglecting the Passover, showing a shared consequence for sacred duties.