Job 35:14
Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him, yet judgment is before him; therefore trust thou in him.
Cross-reference
In Job 9:11, Job says he cannot perceive God passing by — directly parallel to Elihu's point about not seeing God in Job 35:14.
In Job 19:7, Job cries out for justice but receives no answer—mirroring the waiting and apparent silence Elihu references.
In Job 23:8-10, Job describes searching for God but not finding Him — a direct parallel to the hiddenness of God in Job 35:14.
Job 33:23 introduces a mediator who declares what is right — directly relevant to Job's case before God in 35:14.
In Job 9:19, Job earlier laments that God is too mighty to be summoned—echoing the same sense of divine inaccessibility Elihu addresses.
In Job 23:3, Job longs to find God — related to the theme of seeking God in Job 35:14, but more about desire than hiddenness.
Micah 7:7-9 expresses confident waiting for God's vindication—a direct parallel to Job's waiting, but with assurance rather than frustration.
Isaiah 50:10 describes trusting God in darkness — directly parallel to Job's situation of waiting without seeing.
Isaiah 30:18 promises that God waits to be gracious and blesses those who wait for him—a hopeful contrast to Job's frustrated waiting.
Psalm 31:22 echoes the feeling of being cut off from God's sight — but then affirms that God hears, answering Job's complaint.
Psalm 97:2 describes God's hiddenness in clouds yet affirms his justice—contrasting Job's perception that God does not see.
Psalm 37:5 urges trust that God will act—a call to faith that contrasts with Job's doubt about God seeing his case.
Psalm 37:6 promises that God will bring forth justice like light—a hopeful outcome that contrasts with Job's current darkness.
Psalm 77:5-10 voices the same anguished waiting and questioning of God's faithfulness—a parallel lament of divine silence.
Psalm 94:15 promises justice will return to the righteous — the outcome Job is waiting for in his case.
Psalm 27:12-14 calls to wait for the Lord with courage—a positive exhortation that contrasts with Job's weary waiting.
Deuteronomy 32:4 declares God's perfect justice — the truth Job must trust while waiting for his case.