Job 7:3
So am I made to possess months of vanity, and wearisome nights are appointed to me.
Cross-references
Job 7:13 continues the thought, seeking comfort in bed but finding none—directly connected to the 'nights of misery'.
Job 29:2 contrasts these 'months of emptiness' with 'months of old' when God watched over him—a direct contrast.
In Job 23:14, Job acknowledges God completes what He appoints, echoing the 'appointed' misery in Job 7:3.
In Job 17:12, Job's friends turn night into day, contrasting with his own experience of endless nights.
Job 16:7 says God has worn him out, similar to Job's 'months of emptiness'—both express exhaustion.
Psalm 6:6 also speaks of nightly weeping and misery, paralleling Job's 'nights of misery'.
Deuteronomy 28:67 describes longing for evening or morning due to dread, paralleling Job's miserable nights.
Psalm 39:5 reflects on the brevity of life, similar to Job's 'months of emptiness'—both express futility.
In Psalm 73:14, the psalmist describes continual suffering, paralleling Job's nights of misery.
Ecclesiastes 1:14 declares all is vanity, echoing Job's 'months of emptiness'—a shared theme of futility.
In Isaiah 38:12, Hezekiah laments life cut short from day to night, similar to Job's prolonged night.