Job 18:11
Terrors shall make him afraid on every side, and shall drive him to his feet.
Cross-reference
In Job 20:25, Zophar echoes Bildad's theme: terrors overwhelm the wicked, reinforcing the same fate.
In Job 21:9, the wicked live without fear — a direct contrast to Bildad's claim that terrors surround the wicked.
In Job 27:20, terrors overtake the wicked like a flood — a parallel description of sudden overwhelming fear.
Job 6:4 has Job himself experiencing 'terrors of God' — Bildad applies the same terror to the wicked.
Job 15:21 says a dreadful sound comes to the wicked — parallels the terrors on every side in Job 18:11.
In Leviticus 26:36, the same terror from sounds causes flight — a covenant curse that echoes Bildad's description of the wicked's fate.
Jeremiah 49:29 again uses 'Terror on every side!' as a cry of judgment, matching Job's phrase exactly.
Jeremiah 46:5 repeats 'terror is on every side' for fleeing warriors, a direct verbal echo of Job's terrors.
Psalm 73:19 describes the wicked suddenly swept away by terrors, mirroring Bildad's depiction of their end.
In Proverbs 28:1, the wicked flee when no one pursues — a direct proverbial parallel to Bildad's claim that terrors drive the wicked to flight.
Jeremiah 20:3 names Pashhur 'Terror on Every Side', directly quoting the phrase from Job's description of the wicked.
In 1 Samuel 14:15, a divinely sent panic spreads through the Philistine camp — an example of terror causing chaos and flight.
Isaiah 33:14 echoes the terror of the wicked before God's consuming fire, paralleling Bildad's description of terrors dogging the wicked.
In 2 Kings 7:6, God sends terror through the sound of an army, causing the Arameans to flee — a historical instance of panic driving flight.
In Psalm 53:5, the wicked are in great terror where no terror was — a similar theme of groundless fear overwhelming the godless.
Daniel 5:9 shows Belshazzar's terror at divine judgment, similar to the terrors that surround the wicked in Job 18:11.
Revelation 6:16 depicts people crying out in terror of the Lamb's wrath, similar to the terror that dogs the wicked in Job.
Jeremiah 6:25 uses the same phrase 'terror on every side' for enemy invasion, a different context but identical wording.