Job 10:6

That thou enquirest after mine iniquity, and searchest after my sin?

Cross-reference

Job 10:14-17 elaborates on God hunting and watching for sin, continuing the same complaint from Job 10:6 within the same speech.

Job 13:27 Parallel

Job 13:27 echoes the same complaint: God watches every step and restricts him, intensifying Job's sense of divine surveillance.

Job 14:16 Parallel

Job 14:16 wishes God would 'number his steps' but not watch sin—a similar theme of divine scrutiny, though hypothetical.

Psalm 44:21 Parallel

Psalm 44:21 affirms God knows hidden sins, paralleling Job's claim that God actively searches out faults and probes after sin.

Zephaniah 1:12 portrays God searching Jerusalem with lamps to punish, mirroring Job's depicted divine scrutiny of his faults.

Psalm 10:15 Contrast

Psalm 10:15 prays for God to call the wicked to account, contrasting with Job's grievance that God is already searching out his faults.

1 Corinthians 4:5 also speaks of God revealing hidden things, but there it is a future judgment, contrasting with Job's present sense of scrutiny.