Job 13:25
Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro? and wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?
Cross-reference
In Job 14:3, Job asks why God opens His eyes to judge him — continuing the same metaphor of being pursued and scrutinized.
Job 30:21 directly accuses God of being cruel and opposing him — echoes the same complaint of God pursuing him harshly.
Job 33:10 restates Job's complaint that God counts him as an enemy — reinforces the theme of Job feeling persecuted by God.
Job 21:18 compares the wicked to stubble blown away — same metaphor but applied to the fate of the wicked, not Job.
In 1 Samuel 24:14, David uses the same 'pursuing a flea' imagery — both complain that the pursuer targets something insignificant.
Matthew 12:20 shows Jesus not breaking a bruised reed — a direct contrast to Job's God breaking a driven leaf.
Psalm 103:14 says God remembers we are dust — contrasts with Job's sense that God instead pursues and breaks the weak.
Psalm 83:13 prays for enemies to be like stubble driven by wind — same imagery but as a plea against foes, not personal lament.
Isaiah 17:13 describes enemies chased like chaff before the wind — same imagery but applied to God scattering nations, not to personal suffering.