Job 24:15
The eye also of the adulterer waiteth for the twilight, saying, No eye shall see me: and disguiseth his face.
Cross-reference
Job 22:13 echoes the adulterer's claim that no eye sees, questioning God's knowledge of hidden sin.
Job 22:14 expands on the idea that God is hidden and doesn't see, directly paralleling the adulterer's belief.
Job 31:9 describes lying in wait at a neighbor's door — directly parallels the adulterer's lurking in Job 24:15.
Exodus 20:14 is the commandment against adultery — the sin the adulterer commits in secret at twilight here.
In 2 Samuel 11:4-13, David's adultery mirrors the adulterer who thinks no eye sees him, yet his cover-up fails.
2 Samuel 12:12 contrasts the secret sin with public exposure, directly answering the adulterer's claim that no eye sees.
Psalm 10:11 expresses the same arrogant assumption that God doesn't see evil, matching the adulterer's mindset.
Psalm 73:11 similarly questions God's knowledge, aligning with the adulterer's belief that no eye sees.
Psalm 94:7 echoes the same wicked mindset: sinners think God does not see their secret deeds.
Proverbs 7:9 sets the same twilight scene for adultery, echoing the timing in Job 24:15.
Ezekiel 8:12 describes elders doing evil in dark rooms, saying 'The Lord does not see us' — identical to the adulterer's delusion.
Luke 12:3 declares hidden things will be exposed — contrasting the adulterer's belief that no eye sees him.
Proverbs 6:32-35 warns of the destruction adultery brings, contrasting the secrecy in Job 24:15 with its consequences.
Proverbs 7:10 depicts the seductress, while Job 24:15 describes the adulterer's secretive intent — both part of adultery narrative.