Proverbs 19:3

The foolishness of man perverteth his way: and his heart fretteth against the Lord.

Cross-reference

In 2 Kings 6:33, the king says 'This trouble is from the LORD'—a clear case of blaming God for a calamity resulting from human decisions.

Revelation 16:9-11 describes people cursing God amid plagues and refusing to repent, a direct parallel to raging against God.

Isaiah 8:21 Parallel

Isaiah 8:21 depicts people cursing God in distress, exactly mirroring the rage against God for their own folly.

In 2 Chronicles 16:10, Asa gets angry and imprisons the prophet—a clear example of raging against God's messenger, i.e., against God.

Genesis 3:6-12 shows Adam's folly eating the fruit ruining everything, then he blames God — exactly the pattern of raging against the LORD.

In 2 Kings 3:10, Jehoram blames the LORD for their predicament—a direct example of raging against God for one's own folly.

Numbers 16:19-41: Korah's rebellion (folly) ends in destruction, then the people blame Moses — their hearts rage against God's representatives.

Genesis 4:5-14: Cain's foolish envy leads to murder and ruin, then he complains to God about his punishment — a classic rage against the LORD.

Jeremiah 3:21 echoes 'perverted their way' — Israel also blames God for their own foolish choices.

Lamentations 3:39 questions complaining against punishment for sin — matching the folly of fretting against God.

Ezekiel 18:29 has Israel accusing God of unfairness — same blaming of God for one's own crooked ways.

Ezekiel 33:20 repeats 'the way of the Lord is not fair' — directly paralleling the heart that frets against God.

Genesis 3:12 shows Adam blaming Eve and implicitly God for his own sin, a classic example of this pattern.

1 Samuel 22:13-14: Saul rages against Ahimelech for helping David — his jealous folly drives him to accuse and kill, showing a heart raging against God's anointed.

1 Samuel 15:23: Saul's rebellion (folly) leads to being rejected as king — another clear case of folly bringing ruin, matching the first half of the proverb.

1 Samuel 13:13: Samuel tells Saul his foolish sacrifice cost him the kingdom — a direct instance of folly bringing ruin, though the rage is not explicit here.

Acts 13:45 Parallel

In Acts 13:45, jealous Jews contradict and abuse Paul—a reaction against God's message, similar to raging against the LORD.