Job 30:10
They abhor me, they flee far from me, and spare not to spit in my face.
Cross-reference
Job 19:13 describes brothers and acquaintances estranged — the same abandonment Job laments in 30:10.
Job 19:14 adds that relatives fail and friends forget — reinforcing the isolation theme of 30:10.
Job 19:19 laments that his intimate friends abhor him — the same theme of rejection and loathing from close ones.
Numbers 12:14 describes spitting in the face as a sign of shame — the exact act Job endures in 30:10.
Deuteronomy 25:9 prescribes spitting in the face as a ritual of disgrace — the same gesture of contempt Job faces.
Psalm 88:8 echoes Job's experience: companions shun him and he becomes a horror to them — identical theme of social rejection.
Proverbs 19:7 states that the poor are hated and avoided by brothers and friends — a general wisdom parallel to Job's specific rejection.
Isaiah 50:6 portrays the suffering servant who does not hide from spitting — a prophetic parallel to Job's experience of disgrace.
Matthew 26:67 shows Jesus being spit on and struck, mirroring Job's experience of being abhorred and spat upon.
Matthew 27:30 adds another instance of Jesus being spit on, reinforcing the parallel of innocent suffering.
Mark 10:34 predicts Jesus will be mocked and spit on, directly echoing Job's treatment.
Mark 14:65 records the actual spitting on Jesus, fulfilling the prediction and paralleling Job.
Zechariah 11:8 describes mutual loathing between prophet and shepherds — similar language of being abhorred, though in a different prophetic context.
Proverbs 14:20 notes that the poor are disliked — similar to Job being abhorred, but a general proverb.