Luke 1:37

For with God nothing shall be impossible.

Cross-references

Genesis 18:14 asks 'Is anything too hard for the LORD?'—the same declaration of God's power that the angel echoes here.

Numbers 11:23 asks 'Is the LORD's hand waxed short?'—a different metaphor for the same truth that nothing is impossible for God.

Jeremiah 32:17 states 'there is nothing too hard for thee' in a prayer recognizing God's creation power, directly paralleling the angel's words.

Jeremiah 32:27 has God ask 'Is there any thing too hard for me?'—the same rhetorical affirmation of omnipotence.

Matthew 19:26 records Jesus saying 'with God all things are possible'—the same principle applied to salvation.

Mark 10:27 Parallel

Mark 10:27 has Jesus state 'with God all things are possible'—another direct echo of the angel's declaration.

1 Kings 17:16 shows God supernaturally sustaining the widow's flour and oil—a concrete OT example of nothing being impossible for Him.

Daniel 3:17 Parallel

Daniel 3:17 declares God is 'able to deliver' from the furnace—a direct confession of His power to do the impossible.

Matthew 17:20 uses identical 'nothing will be impossible' language, applying it to faith-filled believers.

Romans 4:21 Parallel

Romans 4:21 describes Abraham fully convinced God was able to fulfill His promise—a parallel of trusting God's power over impossibility.

2 Kings 3:18 calls Moab's defeat 'a light thing' for God, echoing the theme that no task is too hard for Him.

Acts 26:8 Parallel

Acts 26:8 asks why resurrection seems incredible, reinforcing that God can do what humans deem impossible.