Job 11:17
And thine age shall be clearer than the noonday; thou shalt shine forth, thou shalt be as the morning.
Cross-reference
Job 42:11-17 shows Job's actual restoration and brighter later life — directly fulfilling the imagery of dawn after darkness.
Psalm 112:4 says light dawns in darkness for the upright — directly parallels the promise of brighter life after darkness.
Proverbs 4:18 uses the same dawn-to-full-day metaphor for the righteous path, echoing Job's promised brightness after darkness.
Isaiah 58:8-10 promises light like dawn and healing, directly mirroring Job 11:17's brighter than noonday and darkness like morning.
Micah 7:9 speaks of being brought out to light after bearing indignation, a strong parallel to Job's promise that darkness becomes morning.
Malachi 4:2 promises the sun of righteousness rising with healing, directly paralleling Job 11:17's brighter than noonday and restoration.
Isaiah 58:10 echoes this promise: 'your light will rise in the darkness, your night like noonday' — connecting righteous acts to blessing.
Psalm 37:6 promises righteousness shining like noonday — same bright-after-darkness metaphor for vindication.
Micah 7:8 expresses confidence that after sitting in darkness, the Lord will be light — a parallel to Job's dark-to-bright promise.
Hosea 6:3 compares the Lord's coming to the dawn, a metaphor similar to Job's brightness after darkness.
Zechariah 14:7 promises light at evening time on a unique day, echoing Job's theme of light after darkness.