Luke 17:4

And if he trespass against thee seven times in a day, and seven times in a day turn again to thee, saying, I repent; thou shalt forgive him.

Cross-reference

Luke 6:37 Parallel

Luke 6:37 commands forgiveness as part of the Sermon on the Plain — directly parallel to the call for repeated forgiveness here.

Matthew 6:12 links our forgiveness of others to God forgiving us — the same principle applied in prayer.

Matthew 6:14 promises divine forgiveness conditional on forgiving others — reinforcing the necessity here.

Matthew 6:15 warns that unforgiveness blocks God's forgiveness — the negative counterpart to the positive command here.

Matthew 18:21 records Peter asking exactly this — how many times to forgive — leading to Jesus' answer of unlimited forgiveness.

Matthew 18:22 extends forgiveness beyond seven to seventy-seven times — showing that the command here implies unlimited forgiveness.

Matthew 18:35 warns that failing to forgive from the heart brings judgment — reinforcing the imperative to forgive repeatedly here.

Ephesians 4:32 grounds forgiveness in God's example — forgive as Christ forgave you, reinforcing the unlimited call here.

Colossians 3:13 directly parallels: 'forgive as the Lord forgave you' — same command for mutual forgiveness.

2 Thessalonians 3:14 commands disassociation from the disobedient — opposing the call for unlimited forgiveness here.

Matthew 18:15 gives the first step in confronting a sinning brother — part of the same teaching on forgiveness that leads to unlimited forgiveness here.

In Genesis 50:17, Joseph's brothers ask forgiveness for their past sins — echoing the call to forgive those who repent here.

Matthew 5:44 widens the command to love enemies, while here the focus is forgiving a repentant brother.

Matthew 18:16 addresses the process when a brother does not repent, while here repentance triggers forgiveness.