Job 10:14
If I sin, then thou markest me, and thou wilt not acquit me from mine iniquity.
Cross-reference
Job 10:6 asks why God searches for sin, and verse 14 explains that if he sins, God marks him — a sequential parallel.
In Job 7:21, Job similarly asks why God won't pardon his sin, echoing the complaint here that God marks sin and refuses to acquit.
Job 13:26 expands the same complaint—God writes bitter accusations against him, recalling his youthful sins.
Job 13:27 depicts God confining and watching Job's every step—parallel to the surveillance and judgment in Job 10:14.
Job 9:29 says 'I shall be condemned,' directly paralleling the complaint here that God will not acquit him of iniquity.
God's response in Job 40:2 challenges Job's faultfinding — a direct contrast to Job's complaint here that God unfairly marks his sin.
Job 30:21 describes God's cruelty in persecuting Job, echoing the harsh scrutiny and lack of acquittal here.
Psalm 130:3 acknowledges that if God marked sins, no one could stand—contrasting with Job's experience that God indeed marks his sins.
Exodus 34:7 declares God will not clear the guilty, mirroring Job's complaint that God marks his sin and withholds acquittal.
Philippians 3:9 presents righteousness through faith, contrasting Job's lament that God will not acquit him — a shift from law to grace.
Numbers 14:18 states God will not clear the guilty, the same principle Job feels is applied to him in his lament.
Psalm 139:1 celebrates God's searching knowledge—the same scrutiny Job feels as oppressive judgment.
Nahum 1:3 declares God will not clear the guilty, the same attribute Job feels is applied against him in verse 14.