Leviticus 9:23
And Moses and Aaron went into the tabernacle of the congregation, and came out, and blessed the people: and the glory of the Lord appeared unto all the people.
Cross-reference
In Leviticus 9:6, Moses promises that obeying God's command will cause the glory to appear — here in 9:23 that promise is fulfilled.
Leviticus 9:4 promises the LORD will appear; here that promise is fulfilled as the glory appears.
In Numbers 14:10, the same phrase describes the glory appearing when the congregation rebels — a parallel manifestation of divine presence.
In Numbers 16:19, the glory appears at the tent when Korah gathers against Moses — echoing the same divine manifestation.
In Numbers 16:42, after the rebellion, the glory again appears at the tent — a repeated pattern of divine presence.
In Hebrews 9:24-28, Christ enters heaven itself, the true tabernacle, foreshadowed by Moses and Aaron entering the tent and the glory appearing.
In Exodus 24:16, the glory of the Lord dwells on Sinai — the same divine manifestation, though at a different location.
In Exodus 39:43, Moses blesses the people after completing the tabernacle work — a parallel act of blessing following a sacred task.
Numbers 6:23 gives the command for Aaron to bless the people; here Moses and Aaron perform that blessing.
1 Kings 8:11 describes the glory of the LORD filling the temple at its dedication, mirroring this glory appearing at the tabernacle.
2 Chronicles 7:1 has fire and glory filling the temple at dedication, paralleling the glory appearing here.
In 2 Samuel 6:18, David blesses the people after bringing the ark, paralleling the blessing here after the tabernacle dedication.
Isaiah 60:2 prophesies the LORD's glory appearing on Zion, echoing the visible glory here.