Lux Domini
For with God nothing shall be impossible.

What does Luke 1:37 mean?

We have here an account of the mother of our Lord; though we are not to pray to her, yet we ought to praise God for her. Christ must be born miraculously.

Key themes

PrayerJustice and mercySalvationSpirit

Read with

Keep this verse inside Luke 1:37-41 and alongside a few nearby related passages.

Commentary on Luke 1:37

That is consistent with his nature and perfections, with his counsels, purposes, and promises: every thing that he has said, purposed, or promised, he is able to do, and will; every word that he has spoken, every thing predicted by his prophets, or declared by his angels, and particularly this of a virgin's conceiving and bearing a Son: so that the angel not only answers her question, how this should be, but confirms her faith in it; partly by the instance of her cousin Elisabeth, and partly by observing the infinite omnipotence of God.

Context in Luke 1

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Luke 1 belongs to the opening movement of the book, especially the section often described as infancy narratives and preparation. Luke emphasizes salvation for the poor and the outsider, prayer, joy, women, table fellowship, the Holy Spirit, and the universal reach of Christ’s mission. Read this chapter with the wider themes of salvation, Spirit, and prayer in view so the individual verses keep their proper weight.

salvationSpiritprayerjoy

Explore by topic

Bible verses about prayer

Passages on asking, persistence, confession, dependence, and the way prayer shapes Christian life and attention.

Bible verses about justice and mercy

Key texts on public righteousness, neighbor-love, social ethics, compassion, and the prophetic refusal to separate worship from justice.

Bible verses about salvation

Central texts on sin, grace, faith, Christ’s saving work, and the Bible’s announcement that salvation is received rather than achieved.