Leviticus 9:6
And Moses said, This is the thing which the Lord commanded that ye should do: and the glory of the Lord shall appear unto you.
Cross-reference
Leviticus 9:23 reports the fulfillment of this promise: Moses and Aaron bless the people and the glory appears.
Leviticus 9:4 first announces the LORD's appearance; verse 6 repeats this with 'glory of the LORD'.
Exodus 16:10 records a prior appearance of the glory of the LORD in a cloud, prefiguring this promised manifestation.
Exodus 24:16 describes the glory dwelling on Sinai, another example of God's visible presence that this verse anticipates.
Exodus 40:34 shows the glory filling the tabernacle at its completion, establishing the pattern for this later appearance.
Exodus 40:35 continues the same event, emphasizing the overwhelming nature of the glory that Moses also saw.
1 Kings 8:10-12 parallels this with the cloud filling Solomon's temple, linking tabernacle and temple theophanies.
2 Chronicles 5:14 concludes the scene, describing the priests unable to minister due to the glory, mirroring Exodus 40:35.
In Ezekiel 43:2, the glory of the LORD returns to the temple — the same divine manifestation promised here at the tabernacle dedication.
Exodus 16:7 also promises seeing the glory of the LORD, here in response to Israel's murmuring for bread.
Numbers 16:19 also records the glory of the LORD appearing, but in judgment — a different occasion of the same theophany.
1 Kings 8:11 describes the glory of the LORD filling the temple at its dedication, similar to the tabernacle dedication here.