Job 34:6

Should I lie against my right? my wound is incurable without transgression.

Cross-reference

Job 6:4 Parallel

Job 6:4 describes God's arrows poisoning him — the same 'incurable wound' imagery Job uses in his complaint.

Job 16:13 Parallel

Job 16:13 depicts God slashing his kidneys — another vivid picture of the divine attack that leaves Job with an incurable wound.

Job 27:4-6 has Job himself vowing to maintain his integrity and not lie about his righteousness — directly echoing his claim here.

Job 9:17 Parallel

Job 9:17 says God multiplies his wounds without cause — directly parallel to Job's claim of being without transgression yet wounded.

Job 11:4 Allusion

Job 11:4 quotes Job's claim 'my doctrine is pure' — the same self-justification that Elihu quotes here.

Job 32:2 Historical context

Job 32:2 explains Elihu's anger at Job for justifying himself — the very attitude expressed in this verse.

Job 40:8 Contrast

Job 40:8 has God challenging Job: 'Will you condemn me that you may be justified?' — a direct rebuttal to Job's claim of innocence here.

Jeremiah 30:15 declares the incurable wound is due to sin, directly contrasting Job's claim of innocence despite his incurable wound.

Jeremiah 15:18 uses the same 'incurable wound' imagery for his own lament, but Jeremiah's complaint is to God about his suffering, while Job claims innocence.