Job 16:16
My face is foul with weeping, and on my eyelids is the shadow of death;
Cross-references
In Job 17:7, the same speaker's eye dim from vexation continues the physical description of weeping and darkness.
Job 3:5 uses darkness imagery for his birth day, connecting to the same theme of deep darkness in Job's present grief.
In Psalm 6:6, the same image of tears drenching the bed echoes Job's weeping face and deep darkness.
In Psalm 6:7, the eye wasting from grief parallels Job's face red with weeping and eyelids darkened.
In Psalm 31:9, the eye wasted from grief and body distressed mirrors Job's weeping and physical anguish.
In Psalm 69:3, weary crying and dim eyes echo Job's red face and darkened eyelids from weeping.
In Psalm 102:9, mingling tears with drink directly parallels Job's weeping and darkened eyelids.
In Lamentations 1:16, weeping with flowing tears and no comforter echoes Job's red face and deep darkness.
Psalm 116:3 uses parallel imagery of distress and near-death sorrow, echoing Job's weeping and darkness.