Job 12:5
He that is ready to slip with his feet is as a lamp despised in the thought of him that is at ease.
Cross-references
In Job 16:4, Job says he could also mock if roles were reversed - directly echoes the contempt of the at-ease toward the slipping.
Job 16:20 says 'my friends scorn me' - directly illustrates the contempt from those at ease toward the suffering.
In Job 21:3, Job anticipates mockery from his friends, exemplifying the contempt for the unfortunate described in 12:5.
In Psalm 17:5, the psalmist declares his feet have not slipped — contrasting the slipping feet Job shows being condemned by the complacent.
Psalm 94:18 records God's support when feet slip — a direct contrast to the contempt for slipping described in Job 12:5.
Psalm 123:3 cries for mercy because 'we are filled with contempt' - same experience of being despised by the comfortable.
Psalm 123:4 explicitly mentions 'scorning of those at ease' - nearly identical language to Job 12:5's theme.
Amos 6:1-6 condemns those at ease in Zion who ignore the ruin of others - direct parallel to the contempt for the afflicted.
In Galatians 4:14, Paul's affliction was not despised, contrasting the contempt in Job 12:5—a positive reversal.