Commentary on Luke 1:37 — The Living Sword
“For with God nothing shall be impossible.”
Luke 1:37 (King James Version)
This page contains an in-depth Bible commentary on Luke 1:37 — covering historical context, meaning, and application. The full AI-powered commentary is available in the interactive Bible reader.
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About this Passage
Luke 1:37 is verse 37 of chapter 1 in the Book of Luke, part of the New Testament. In the King James Version (1611), it reads: “For with God nothing shall be impossible.”
Luke 1:37 (King James Version): "For with God nothing shall be impossible." Luke 1:37 appears in the Book of Luke, New Testament, chapter 1, verse 37. The Book of Luke was written by Amos of Tekoa (c. 760–750 BC). Amos is a shepherd and farmer from Tekoa in Judah who is called by God to preach to the wealthy, prosperous, corrupt northern kingdom of Israel. His message is a thunderclap of social justice: Israel has grown rich while oppressing the poor, and God is not impressed with their religious observance. 'I hate, I despise your religious festivals; your assemblies are a stench to me... But let justice r Key themes in Luke include: social justice, judgment, righteousness, repentance. To study Luke 1:37 in depth — including word-by-word analysis in the original Greek, cross-references, multiple translations (KJV, WEB, Geneva, ASV, YLT, Darby), and AI-powered commentary — visit The Living Sword Bible at thelivingsword.org.
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