Job 16:11

God hath delivered me to the ungodly, and turned me over into the hands of the wicked.

Cross-reference

Job 1:13–19 Historical context

In Job 1:13-19, the disasters (Sabeans, fire, Chaldeans) are the very 'ungodly' agents Job says God handed him over to.

Job 2:7 Historical context

In Job 2:7, Satan afflicts Job with boils — another instance of God handing him over to suffering, confirming the pattern.

Job 19:6 Parallel

Job 19:6 says God has 'overthrown' him and 'compassed' him with a net — another image of God's active affliction.

Job 19:12 Parallel

Job 19:12 describes God's troops encamping against him — the same hostile action as being delivered to the wicked.

Job 10:17 Parallel

In Job 10:17, Job says God renews witnesses against him — consistent with God delivering him to the wicked here.

Job 12:14 Parallel

Job 12:14 describes God shutting a man up — parallel to God handing Job over to the wicked with no escape.

In 1 Samuel 24:18, David spares Saul when God delivers Saul into his hand, opposite to Job being delivered to the wicked for harm.

Psalm 27:12 Contrast

Psalm 27:12 pleads with God not to deliver him to enemies — the opposite of Job's lament that God has done exactly that.

Psalm 31:8 Contrast

In Psalm 31:8, David thanks God for not handing him over to the enemy, directly contrasting Job's complaint that God has done so.

John 19:16 Typology

In John 19:16, Pilate hands Jesus over to be crucified — a typological parallel of God's servant delivered into the hands of the wicked.

Deuteronomy 32:30 says the Lord 'sold' them and 'shut them up' — the same concept of God handing people over to enemies.

In 2 Corinthians 12:7, Paul also receives a 'thorn in the flesh, a messenger of Satan' allowed by God — a parallel to God handing Job over to the wicked.