Job 18:4

He teareth himself in his anger: shall the earth be forsaken for thee? and shall the rock be removed out of his place?

Cross-references

Job 5:2 Parallel

Job 5:2 states anger kills the foolish, directly paralleling Bildad's accusation that Job tears himself in anger.

Job 19:3 Historical context

Job 19:3 is Job's response to Bildad's reproach — he counts this as one of ten times they have insulted him.

Job 14:18 Allusion

Job 14:18 uses the same 'rock removed' imagery to describe natural decay, echoing Bildad's rhetorical question about whether the rock would move for Job.

Job 16:9 Contrast

Job 16:9 has God tearing Job in wrath, while here Bildad says Job tears himself—contrasting the source of tearing.

Job 40:8 Parallel

Job 40:8 questions Job's right to condemn God, while Bildad asks if the earth should be forsaken for Job—both challenge Job's perspective.

Jonah 4:9 Parallel

Jonah 4:9 shows Jonah's angry self-destructive attitude ('angry even to death'), mirroring Bildad's description of Job tearing himself.

Isaiah 54:10 contrasts Bildad's claim that the earth won't be forsaken — God's covenant kindness is even more unshakeable than mountains.

Matthew 24:35 contrasts Bildad's assertion that the earth cannot be removed — Jesus says heaven and earth will pass away, but his words endure.