Job 11:4
For thou hast said, My doctrine is pure, and I am clean in thine eyes.
Cross-references
Job 6:29 urges friends to reconsider because his integrity is at stake, aligning with his claim of cleanness here.
Job 6:30 asks if there is injustice on his tongue, defending his speech, matching the claim of pure doctrine here.
Job 9:2 admits no one can be righteous before God, directly contrasting Zophar's allegation that Job claims purity.
In Job 10:7, Job directly asserts his innocence to God, reinforcing his claim of cleanness that Zophar mocks here.
In Job 14:4, Job states no one can bring clean from unclean — directly opposing Zophar's accusation that Job claimed personal purity.
In Job 34:5, Elihu similarly quotes Job saying 'I am righteous' — echoing Zophar's accusation of Job's self‑declared purity.
In Job 34:6, Elihu quotes Job claiming to be without transgression — matching Zophar's charge that Job says he is clean.
In Job 35:2, Elihu quotes Job saying 'I am in the right before God' — parallel to Zophar's quotation of Job's claim of purity.
In Job 33:9, Elihu quotes Job saying 'I am pure, clean, without iniquity' — identical to Zophar's accusation in Job 11:4.
In Job 9:14, Job admits he cannot answer God — contrasting with Zophar's portrayal of Job's arrogant claim of purity.