Job 13:2
What ye know, the same do I know also: I am not inferior unto you.
Cross-reference
In Job 12:3, Job already said 'I have understanding as well as you; I am not inferior' — this is a direct repetition of that earlier claim.
In Job 15:8, Eliphaz sarcastically asks if Job listens in God's council — mocking the very claim of wisdom that Job asserts in 13:2.
Job claims equal knowledge; Eliphaz questions that in Job 15:9, directly challenging his assertion.
Elihu accuses Job of speaking without knowledge, directly contradicting Job's claim of understanding.
Elihu again says Job multiplies words without knowledge, opposing Job's earlier claim of insight.
Job humbly covers his mouth after God speaks, a stark contrast to his earlier confident claim of equal knowledge.
Job's silence in Job 40:5 reverses his earlier assertion of knowing as much as his friends.
Eliphaz calls Job's knowledge 'windy', directly challenging Job's claim of not being inferior.
Paul uses the same 'not at all inferior' language to assert his apostolic equality, mirroring Job's claim.
Paul directly states 'I was not at all inferior to the super-apostles', a clear parallel to Job's claim.