Job 17:15

And where is now my hope? as for my hope, who shall see it?

Cross-reference

Job 4:6 Contrast

In Job 4:6, Eliphaz claims hope comes from fearing God, contrasting Job's despair in 17:15.

Job 6:11 Parallel

Job 6:11 expresses similar hopelessness about waiting and endurance, paralleling his cry in 17:15.

Job 13:15 Contrast

Job 13:15 declares hope in God despite death, a stark contrast to the loss of hope in 17:15.

Job 19:10 Parallel

Job 19:10 says his hope is pulled up like a tree, directly echoing the despair over hope in 17:15.

Job 7:6 Parallel

Job 7:6 laments days ending without hope, reinforcing the same theme of hopelessness in 17:15.

Lamentations 3:18 echoes Job's cry of lost hope — 'my hope is gone' — in a different context of national lament.