Leviticus 4:27
And if any one of the common people sin through ignorance, while he doeth somewhat against any of the commandments of the Lord concerning things which ought not to be done, and be guilty;
Cross-references
Leviticus 4:2 lays out the general law for unintentional sin offerings, while this verse applies it specifically to a common person. It's the same legal framework.
Leviticus 4:13 deals with the whole congregation sinning unintentionally — a different case from the individual here, though both follow the same sin offering pattern.
Leviticus 5:17 addresses sin done without knowledge, similar to unintentional sin here, but introduces a guilt offering rather than a sin offering.
Numbers 15:27 prescribes the same offering for an individual's unintentional sin — a female goat — reinforcing the identical procedure for common people.
Numbers 15:29 explicitly states the same law for unintentional sin applies to both native and alien, directly echoing the case of a common person here.
Numbers 15:22 expands the same principle of unintentional sin to the whole community, showing the law's scope from individual to congregation.
Ezekiel 45:20 applies the same concept of unintentional sin and atonement to the temple, echoing the earlier tabernacle law in Leviticus 4:27.