Job 33:21
His flesh is consumed away, that it cannot be seen; and his bones that were not seen stick out.
Cross-reference
In Job 7:5, Job describes his flesh clothed with worms and dust — directly parallel to the wasting away here.
In Job 13:28, Job compares himself to a rotten thing consumed — same imagery of physical decay.
In Job 14:22, Job speaks of flesh in pain and soul mourning — directly related to the physical wasting and suffering here.
In Job 19:20, Job says his bone cleaves to skin — identical description of emaciation as here.
Psalm 22:15-17 describes bones countable and strength dried up — a vivid parallel to Job's wasted flesh and protruding bones.
Psalm 102:3-5 vividly echoes the same wasting — bones burning, groaning, flesh clinging — as Job's extreme physical decay here.
Psalm 22:17 echoes the same protruding bones — 'I can count all my bones' — as Job's bones sticking out here.
Psalm 32:3 describes bones wasting from unconfessed sin — a parallel physical decay to Job's wasting here, though from different causes.
Psalm 39:11 depicts God's discipline consuming what is dear — a parallel theme of divine action causing physical wasting, though Job's suffering is not disciplinary.
Proverbs 5:11 warns of flesh consumed from adultery — a different cause but similar imagery of physical decay as in Job's wasting.
Lamentations 4:8 describes skin shriveled on bones from famine — a parallel physical wasting to Job's condition here.