Job 27:22
For God shall cast upon him, and not spare: he would fain flee out of his hand.
Cross-references
Job 20:24 describes the wicked fleeing from a bronze arrow—the same arrow imagery and flight, from Zophar's parallel speech.
In Job 40:11, God commands pouring out anger on the proud — a parallel to His own action of hurling without pity.
Isaiah 10:3 asks where the wicked will flee on the day of punishment — directly echoing the futile flight described here.
Ezekiel 9:5 commands 'show no pity'—the exact phrase used in Job 27:22, reinforcing the severity of divine judgment.
Ezekiel 9:6 continues the same scene of merciless judgment, executing all without sparing—mirroring Job's 'without pity'.
Amos 2:14 declares that the swift and strong cannot escape God's judgment — a clear parallel to the wicked's inability to flee.
Amos 9:1-3 emphasizes that no hiding place can evade God's judgment — reinforcing the theme of inescapable divine pursuit.
Romans 8:32 contrasts God not sparing His own Son for our salvation—opposite to the unsparing judgment on the wicked here.
2 Peter 2:4 says God did not spare fallen angels—a parallel example of divine judgment without pity, like Job's wicked.
2 Peter 2:5 says God did not spare the ancient world—another historical instance of unsparing judgment, echoing Job's theme.
Psalm 78:50 describes God making a path for His anger and not sparing from death — mirroring the relentless judgment here.
Deuteronomy 29:20 speaks of God's anger burning without forgiveness—a thematic parallel to the 'without pity' judgment here.