Job 11:11
For he knoweth vain men: he seeth wickedness also; will he not then consider it?
Cross-reference
Job 22:14 claims thick clouds veil God so He doesn't see — directly opposing Job 11:11's assertion that God sees iniquity.
Job 22:13 quotes doubters asking 'What does God know?' — contrasting with Job 11:11's affirmation that God knows false men.
Psalm 10:14 affirms that God does see mischief — directly supporting Job 11:11's claim that God sees iniquity.
Psalm 94:11 states God knows human thoughts are futile—parallel to Job 11:11 that God knows false men and sees iniquity.
In Jeremiah 17:10, God declares He searches the heart — directly reinforcing Job 11:11's truth that God knows deceitful men.
Hosea 7:2 states God remembers all evil — closely parallel to God knowing worthless men and seeing iniquity in Job 11:11.
John 2:25 states Jesus knew what was in man — directly paralleling God's knowledge of false men in Job 11:11.
Hebrews 4:13 declares all creatures are exposed before God — reinforcing Job 11:11's claim that God sees iniquity.
Revelation 2:23 presents Christ as the one who searches minds and hearts — mirroring the divine omniscience in Job 11:11.
1 Corinthians 3:20 says the Lord knows the thoughts of the wise are futile — directly paralleling God's knowledge of worthless men in Job 11:11.
Habakkuk 1:13 questions why God, too pure to look at evil, remains silent — a tension with Job 11:11's assertion that God sees iniquity.
Psalm 10:11 records the wicked saying God will never see — contrary to Job 11:11 where God sees iniquity.
John 2:24 says Jesus knew all people — echoing the divine omniscience about human hearts in Job 11:11.
Psalm 33:15 says God understands all human works — reinforcing the theme of God's complete knowledge including iniquity.
Psalm 35:22 echoes that God sees, but David appeals for God to see his plight and act — a plea grounded in divine awareness.
Ecclesiastes 5:8 reminds that God observes oppression and injustice, similar to Job 11:11's claim that God sees iniquity.