Numbers 7:13
And his offering was one silver charger, the weight thereof was an hundred and thirty shekels, one silver bowl of seventy shekels, after the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them were full of fine flour mingled with oil for a meat offering:
Cross-reference
Numbers 7:85 sums the total weight of all silver chargers and bowls from the individual offerings, providing a collective tally.
Numbers 7:79 repeats the same offering description for the twelfth leader, showing the identical formula for each tribal prince.
In Numbers 7:31, Reuben's leader brings the identical offering — same silver dish, basin, and gold ladle with grain and incense.
In Numbers 7:37, Simeon's leader brings the identical offering — same vessels and contents as Judah's.
In Numbers 7:43, Gad's leader brings the identical offering — same silver dish, basin, and gold ladle with grain and incense.
In Numbers 7:49, Ephraim's leader brings the identical offering — same vessels and contents as Judah's.
In Numbers 7:55, Manasseh's leader brings the identical offering — same silver dish, basin, and gold ladle with grain and incense.
In Numbers 7:61, Benjamin's leader brings the identical offering — same vessels and contents as Judah's.
In Numbers 7:67, Dan's leader brings the identical offering — same silver dish, basin, and gold ladle with grain and incense.
In Numbers 7:73, Asher's leader brings the identical offering — same vessels and contents as Judah's.
Exodus 30:13 establishes the 'shekel of the sanctuary' as a standard, which Numbers 7:13 then uses for the offering weight.
Daniel 5:2 shows Belshazzar using temple vessels for a pagan feast, directly profaning the sacred silver bowls dedicated here.
Leviticus 27:25 defines the sanctuary shekel as 20 gerahs, the same system used to measure the silver bowls offered here.
2 Kings 25:15 mentions silver bowls taken from the temple, directly paralleling the silver bowl offered here.
Ezra 1:9 lists silver chargers returned from exile, matching the silver charger offered here.
Ezra 1:10 lists silver bowls among temple vessels returned from exile, echoing the silver vessels dedicated at the tabernacle.
Jeremiah 52:19 lists silver bowls taken from the temple, contrasting their consecration here with removal in judgment.
Zechariah 14:20 prophesies that common pots will become like the sanctuary bowls, fulfilling the ideal of holiness represented here.
Exodus 37:16 describes the execution of the gold table vessels, paralleling the silver items here for the altar.
Ezra 8:25 describes weighing silver and vessels for the temple offering, paralleling the silver bowls offered here.
Exodus 25:29 lists gold bowls for the table of showbread, while the silver charger and bowl here are for the altar dedication—similar but different contexts.