Leviticus 4:29
And he shall lay his hand upon the head of the sin offering, and slay the sin offering in the place of the burnt offering.
Cross-reference
Leviticus 4:4 describes the same hand-laying and slaughter for a bullock; here the ritual applies to a goat.
Leviticus 4:24 prescribes the same hand-laying and slaughter for a leader's goat; here for a commoner's goat.
Leviticus 4:33 repeats the hand-laying and slaughter for a lamb; here the same ritual uses a goat.
Leviticus 4:15 has elders lay hands for the congregation's offering; here the individual does so for his own.
Leviticus 6:25 explicitly states the sin offering must be killed where the burnt offering is killed, confirming the location rule in Leviticus 4:29.
Leviticus 1:4 shows the same hand-laying ritual for burnt offerings, linking the gesture of identification and atonement across sacrifice types.
Leviticus 9:8 provides a narrative example of Aaron killing a sin offering, putting the Leviticus 4:29 instruction into practice.
Leviticus 7:2 extends the same location rule to guilt offerings, showing consistency in sacrificial procedures.
Hebrews 10:4-14 argues animal sacrifices cannot take away sins, contrasting Christ's once-for-all sacrifice with repeated OT sin offerings.
Exodus 29:14 adds the disposal instruction to burn the sin offering outside the camp, a detail not in Leviticus 4:29.