Job 3:17
There the wicked cease from troubling; and there the weary be at rest.
Cross-references
Job 17:16 directly echoes the hope of rest in Sheol from 3:17, questioning if they will rest together.
Job 16:7 describes God wearing Job out, contrasting with the rest from trouble in death (3:17).
Psalm 55:5-8 desires wings to fly away and be at rest, paralleling Job's view of death as a place where the weary rest.
In Isaiah 57:1, the righteous are taken away to be spared from evil, echoing Job's comfort that the weary rest in death.
In Isaiah 57:2, the upright find peace and rest in death, directly parallel to Job's depiction of the weary at rest.
In Luke 12:4, death ends human persecution, echoing Job's comfort that the wicked cease troubling and the weary rest.
In 2 Thessalonians 1:7, believers receive relief at Christ's coming, parallel to Job's longing for rest from weariness in death.
In Revelation 14:13, the dead who die in the Lord rest from their labor, directly echoing Job's comfort that the weary find rest.
Ecclesiastes 4:2 declares the dead more fortunate than the living, a direct parallel to Job's longing for death's rest.
Ecclesiastes 9:6 notes the dead have no more part in earthly affairs, paralleling the cessation of troubling in Sheol.
In Hebrews 4:9, a Sabbath-rest remains for God's people—a spiritual rest parallel to Job's physical rest in death, but different context.