Job 31:15
Did not he that made me in the womb make him? and did not one fashion us in the womb?
Cross-reference
Job 10:8-12 expands on God's intimate creation of Job in the womb, deepening the theme of divine craftsmanship.
In Job 34:19, Elihu says God shows no partiality because all are the work of His hands — directly paralleling Job's point that the same God made both rich and poor.
In Nehemiah 5:5, the people lament enslaving their own brothers despite shared flesh — applying Job's principle that all are made by the same God.
Psalm 139:14-16 similarly marvels at God's formation of the unborn, affirming the sacredness of every person's origin.
In Proverbs 14:31, oppressing the poor insults their Maker — the same logic as Job's that mistreating anyone dishonors the Creator who made both.
In Proverbs 22:2, the rich and poor meet together because the Lord made them all — nearly identical to Job's statement about common creation.
Malachi 2:10 echoes the same rhetorical question about one Creator and Father, reinforcing the call to treat others faithfully.
Psalm 139:13 directly parallels Job's statement: 'You knitted me together in my mother's womb' — same creation imagery.
Isaiah 44:24 declares God as the one who formed you from the womb, reinforcing the Creator's role in every life.
James 1:27 defines pure religion as caring for orphans and widows, a practical application of Job's principle of equal dignity.