Job 1:11
But put forth thine hand now, and touch all that he hath, and he will curse thee to thy face.
Cross-reference
In Job 1:5, Job sacrifices for his children's possible cursing — directly contrasting Satan's claim here that Job himself will curse.
In Job 1:12, God grants Satan's request but limits the attack — directly following the challenge.
In Job 1:21, Job blesses God after the losses — directly refuting Satan's prediction here that he would curse.
Job 2:5 echoes 1:11 exactly, escalating to physical affliction — same challenge but against Job's body.
In Job 2:9, Job's wife urges him to curse God — echoing and advancing Satan's prediction here.
In Job 19:21, Job says the hand of God has struck him — directly echoing Satan's request here.
In Job 2:3, God reports that Job maintained his integrity, directly contradicting Satan's prediction that Job would curse God.
In Job 3:1, Job curses his birth, not God — a different outcome than Satan's predicted direct curse against God.
In Job 4:5, Eliphaz observes Job is struck by trouble — the very calamity Satan predicted here.
Job 23:10 echoes the testing theme of Job 1:11, but with Job's assurance of faithfulness rather than the predicted cursing.
In Malachi 3:14, people question the profit of serving God—exactly the accusation Satan makes about Job's motives in Job 1:11.
John 8:44 describes Satan as a liar — exactly what he demonstrates in Job 1:11 by falsely claiming Job would curse God.
Psalm 105:15 commands not to touch God's anointed — contrasting with God's permission to Satan here to touch Job's possessions.
2 Corinthians 2:11 warns against ignorance of Satan's designs — Job 1:11 reveals one of his schemes: accusing and testing to cause downfall.
Isaiah 8:21 shows people cursing God in distress — a real-world parallel that makes Satan's prediction here plausible.
Zechariah 2:8 says touching God's people is like touching His eye — a promise that contrasts with God's allowance here.