Leviticus 9:3
And unto the children of Israel thou shalt speak, saying, Take ye a kid of the goats for a sin offering; and a calf and a lamb, both of the first year, without blemish, for a burnt offering;
Cross-reference
Leviticus 9:2 has Aaron's sin offering; here the people bring theirs — both needed for atonement before God.
Leviticus 9:15 records the actual offering of the people's sin offering goat commanded in verse 3, fulfilling the instruction.
Leviticus 23:12 specifies a male lamb a year old without blemish for burnt offering, mirroring the lamb requirement here.
Leviticus 16:15 details slaughtering the sin offering goat for the people — the same purpose as the goat in this inauguration.
Leviticus 10:16 refers to the same sin offering goat from 9:3, as Moses inquires why it was burned instead of eaten.
Leviticus 4:23 requires a male goat for a leader’s sin offering — the same animal type as the people's sin offering here.
Leviticus 16:5 prescribes two male goats for the Day of Atonement sin offering — echoes the single goat used here for the people.
Leviticus 16:3 prescribes a bull and ram for Aaron's atonement offerings, while here the animals include a goat, calf, and lamb — different requirements for different occasions.
Leviticus 5:7 provides an alternative for the poor who cannot afford a lamb, highlighting the standard lamb requirement here.
Leviticus 12:6 requires a sin offering after childbirth — another instance of the sin offering system, here for purification.
Leviticus 14:10 also requires unblemished animals for offerings, showing a consistent standard across different purification rituals.
Exodus 12:5 describes the Passover lamb with the same qualifications — male, year old, without blemish — echoed here for the burnt offering.
Titus 2:14 says Christ gave Himself to redeem and purify a people — parallel to the sin offering's purpose of atonement.
Hebrews 9:26-28 presents Christ's single sacrifice as the fulfillment of repeated sin offerings like this one.
1 Peter 2:24 says Christ bore our sins in His body — the sin offering here symbolizes that bearing of sin.
1 Peter 3:18 says Christ suffered once for sins to bring us to God — the sin offering prefigures this atonement.
Revelation 5:9 praises the Lamb slain to ransom people — connects to the sin offering's blood for atonement.
Ezra 6:17 records twelve male goats as a sin offering for Israel at temple dedication — a later parallel to the inaugural sin offering here.