Job 1:9
Then Satan answered the Lord, and said, Doth Job fear God for nought?
Cross-reference
In Job 1:21, Job's worship after losing everything directly answers Satan's doubt in Job 1:9 – he fears God without reward.
Job 2:10 shows Job maintaining his integrity through further suffering, reinforcing the answer to Satan's question in Job 1:9.
In Job 21:15, the wicked echo Satan's question: 'What profit do we get from serving God?' — reinforcing the theme of transactional piety.
In Job 4:6, Eliphaz questions Job's reverence — echoing Satan's doubt about the genuineness of Job's fear of God.
Job 21:14 records the wicked rejecting God, contrasting with the faithful service Satan questioned in Job 1:9.
1 Timothy 6:6 declares godliness with contentment is great gain — directly answering Satan's accusation that piety is transactional.
In Matthew 4:3, Satan tempts Jesus to prove his sonship through provision — mirroring his testing of Job's motives.
Romans 8:33 declares no charge stands against God's elect — contrasting with Satan's accusation in Job's trial.
In Revelation 12:10, Satan is called the accuser—the same role he plays in Job 1:9 when questioning Job's motives.
1 Timothy 4:8 affirms that godliness has value for all things — contrasting with Satan's assumption that Job serves only for material profit.