Job 10:7
Thou knowest that I am not wicked; and there is none that can deliver out of thine hand.
Cross-reference
In Job 10:15, Job continues his lament: even if innocent, he cannot lift his head — same dilemma as 10:7's claim of innocence despite suffering.
Job 42:7 records God's vindication of Job, confirming he spoke rightly—fulfills Job's claim of innocence in 10:7.
Job 23:10 affirms God knows Job's way and will refine him like gold, reinforcing Job's claim of innocence and trust in trial.
Job 23:13 echoes that God’s will is unchangeable and none can turn Him, reinforcing Job’s earlier declaration of God’s sovereign power.
In Job 23:14, Job acknowledges God’s appointed purpose for him, matching the idea that none can deliver from God’s hand.
Job 31:6 calls for God to weigh him in a just balance—a direct appeal to God's knowledge of his integrity, echoing 10:7.
Job 31:35 demands a hearing from God, presenting his signature—expresses the same desire for vindication and confidence in innocence.
Job 9:29 questions the futility of innocence when God condemns, deepening the tension Job expresses in asserting his innocence despite suffering.
In Job 11:4, Zophar quotes Job's claim of purity and cleanness, directly echoing 10:7's assertion of innocence before God.
In Job 13:15, Job resolves to defend his ways before God, reinforcing his stance of innocence from 10:7 even in the face of death.
In Job 32:1, the narrator notes Job considered himself righteous, summarizing the same claim of innocence as in 10:7.
In Job 5:4, Eliphaz says the wicked’s children have no deliverer, a contrast to Job’s own claim of innocence while facing no deliverance.
Deuteronomy 32:39 is the direct source of the phrase 'none can deliver out of my hand,' which Job applies to God’s sovereign power.
Psalm 7:8 similarly appeals to God to judge based on personal integrity, echoing Job's claim of innocence before the divine judge.
Psalm 17:3 claims God's probing finds no evil, directly paralleling Job's assertion that God knows he is not guilty.
Psalm 26:1-5 invites divine testing based on blamelessness, mirroring Job's appeal to God's knowledge of his integrity.
Psalm 139:1 affirms God's thorough searching and knowledge of a person, underlying Job's confidence that God knows his innocence.
Psalm 139:2 expands on God's intimate knowledge, including thoughts, supporting Job's claim that God knows his true state.
Daniel 3:15 contrasts human arrogance—Nebuchadnezzar boasts no god can deliver—with Job’s confession that only God can deliver.
Hosea 2:10 uses the identical phrase 'none shall deliver out of mine hand' to declare God’s judgment, paralleling Job’s acknowledgment of divine power.
John 10:28-30 promises eternal security in Jesus’ hand, echoing the imagery of God’s hand from which none can deliver—now applied to salvation.
John 21:17 shows Peter appealing to Jesus' omniscience to affirm his love, paralleling Job's appeal to God's knowledge of his innocence.
2 Corinthians 1:12 boasts of a clear conscience before God, echoing Job's reliance on God's witness to his integrity.
1 Thessalonians 2:10 invokes God as witness to blameless conduct, similar to Job's claim that God knows he is not guilty.
Psalm 7:3 has David protesting his innocence before God—mirrors Job's own protest, both pleading a clear conscience.