Job 14:15
Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee: thou wilt have a desire to the work of thine hands.
Cross-reference
Job 7:21 expresses despair that after death God will seek him in vain — contrasting with Job 14:15's hope of answering God's call.
Job 10:3 accuses God of despising the work of His hands — opposite of Job 14:15 where God longs for the same work.
Job 10:8 laments that God who formed him now destroys him — directly opposite to Job 14:15's hope that God will long for him.
In Job 13:22, Job similarly calls for God to summon him so he can answer, paralleling the desire in 14:15 for God to call.
Psalm 138:8 expresses confidence that God will not forsake the work of His hands — paralleling Job's hope that God will call and restore him.
1 Peter 4:19 encourages entrusting souls to a faithful Creator — echoing Job's trust that God will desire the work of His hands.