Job 11:10
If he cut off, and shut up, or gather together, then who can hinder him?
Cross-reference
Job 9:4 asks who has resisted God and succeeded — directly parallel to the rhetorical question in Job 11:10.
Job 9:12 declares no one can turn God back — direct parallel to the unhindered judgment in Job 11:10.
Job 9:13 says God will not turn back his anger — echoing the unstoppable judgment in Job 11:10.
Job 12:14 says if God shuts a man in, none can open — directly parallel to the imprisoning in Job 11:10.
Job 34:29 asks who can condemn when God is quiet — affirming His uncontestable authority, parallel to Job 11:10.
Job 23:13 directly parallels: 'who can turn Him?'—identical theme of God's unopposable will. Same book, same speaker context.
Job 38:8 describes God shutting in the sea — a parallel act of sovereign confinement, echoing the imprisoning in Job 11:10.
Daniel 4:35 states none can stay God's hand or question Him — direct parallel to the rhetorical question in Job 11:10.
Revelation 3:7 echoes the same image: God shuts and no one opens, directly paralleling Job's assertion of God's unresisted authority.
Ecclesiastes 7:13 asks who can straighten what God has bent—identical point: no one can reverse God's actions. Strong thematic parallel.
Deuteronomy 32:30 also affirms that no one can stand against God's sovereign actions—He gives enemies over and none can resist.
2 Chronicles 7:13 uses 'shut up' for heavens—God's sovereign judgment; similar language of divine restraint but different object.