Job 18:19
He shall neither have son nor nephew among his people, nor any remaining in his dwellings.
Cross-reference
Job 1:19 narrates the death of Job's children in a windstorm, directly illustrating the curse of having no survivors.
Job 42:13-16 shows Job blessed with new children, reversing Bildad's curse that the wicked would have no descendants.
Job 21:8 describes the wicked's children thriving — directly opposite to the claim here of no descendants. A clear contrast.
Job 8:4 attributes the death of Job's children to their sin, matching Bildad's claim that the wicked's offspring perish.
Psalm 109:13 curses the wicked with cut-off descendants, identical to Bildad's pronouncement in Job 18:19.
Isaiah 14:21 commands slaughtering children to prevent them from inheriting, echoing the theme of no offspring for the wicked.
Isaiah 14:22 declares God will cut off Babylon's name and remnant, offspring and posterity—same idea as Job 18:19.
Jeremiah 22:30 records a man as childless, with no offspring prospering—parallel to Bildad's curse of no descendants.
Leviticus 20:20 states that those who commit certain sins will die childless — directly parallels the fate of having no offspring.
2 Kings 10:11 recounts Jehu wiping out Ahab's entire house — a literal fulfillment of having no survivors among a wicked line.
Psalm 37:28 explicitly states the offspring of the wicked will perish — a direct parallel to having no survivors.
Isaiah 14:20 says the offspring of the wicked will never be mentioned — a strong parallel to having no descendants.
Hosea 9:11 echoes the same curse of childlessness as judgment on Ephraim, paralleling Bildad's description of the wicked's fate.