Job 33:5
If thou canst answer me, set thy words in order before me, stand up.
Cross-reference
Job 33:32 repeats the same call to answer, showing Elihu's persistent invitation for Job to respond.
Job 33:33 offers an alternative: if Job won't answer, then listen — a complementary continuation of the challenge.
In Job 13:19, Job challenges anyone to contend with him — here Elihu takes up that challenge, calling Job to answer.
In Job 34:33, Elihu continues his challenge, telling Job to choose — part of the same discourse, reinforcing the call.
In Job 9:14, Job despairs of answering God — here Elihu, a fellow human, challenges Job to answer, highlighting the difference.
Job 23:4 shows Job's desire to present his case to God, paralleling Elihu's invitation in Job 33:5 to set words in order.
In Job 23:5, Job longs for God to answer him — here Elihu challenges Job to answer, echoing Job's own desire for dialogue.
In Job 32:14, Elihu says Job hasn't addressed him — now he directly challenges Job to answer, showing a shift in approach.
In Job 9:19, Job says no one can summon God — here Elihu summons Job, a human, to answer.
Job 32:1 explains why Elihu speaks: the three friends stopped answering Job, setting the stage for Elihu's challenge in Job 33:5.
Job 32:12 says no one refuted Job, while Job 33:5 calls Job to answer — a shift from silence to challenge.