Job 19:7
Behold, I cry out of wrong, but I am not heard: I cry aloud, but there is no judgment.
Cross-reference
In Job 10:3, Job similarly questions God's justice and oppression, echoing the complaint of unanswered cry in 19:7.
In Job 10:15-17, Job describes God's relentless pursuit despite innocence, paralleling the lack of response in 19:7.
Job 40:8 is God's rebuke — 'Will you condemn me?' — contrasting Job's cry for justice with the Creator's challenge to his complaint.
Job 16:21 yearns for an arbiter between man and God — the missing mediator that would answer the cry of 19:7.
Job 34:5 quotes Job's claim that God has taken away his right — directly referencing the injustice he cries out about in 19:7.
Job 23:3-7 imagines presenting his case before God's seat — the very audience denied in 19:7, now envisioned as possible.
Job 31:35 directly echoes the desire for a hearing — 'Oh that I had one to hear me!' — intensifying the unanswered cry of 19:7.
In Job 8:3, Bildad asserts God does not pervert justice — directly opposing Job's cry that there is no justice.
In Job 35:14, Elihu says Job's case is before God — contrasting Job's feeling that God does not see or answer.
In Job 30:20, Job again cries out with no answer — a parallel lament of unanswered prayer.
Job 9:32 explains why Job's cry goes unanswered: God is not a man to be argued with — grounding the silence in divine-human disparity.
In Job 16:17-19, Job also cries out but adds hope of a heavenly witness, paralleling the lament in 19:7 with a different tone.
Job 13:15-23 shows Job's determination to argue his case before God — the very hearing he lacks in 19:7, now sought with hope.
In Job 21:27, Job accuses his friends of scheming against him, paralleling the injustice he laments in 19:7.
In Psalm 22:2, David cries out to God with no answer, directly paralleling Job's experience in 19:7.
In Lamentations 3:8, the writer calls for help and God shuts out prayer, directly paralleling Job 19:7.
Habakkuk 1:2 echoes Job's cry of 'Violence!' and being unheard — a parallel lament over God's apparent silence to injustice.
Habakkuk 1:3 adds the prophet's complaint of seeing violence and God idly watching — mirroring Job's frustration at unanswered cries.
In Psalm 55:17, David says God hears his complaint — contrasting Job's experience of being unanswered.
In Jeremiah 20:8, Jeremiah cries 'violence' and faces rejection, paralleling Job's lament of unanswered cry in 19:7.