The Chiasm of Luke 18:1-6

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 18:1-6 the center and climax is the story of the widow who receives legal protection from the judge because of her

The Chiasm of Luke 17:33

Luke 17:33 is an example of a chiasm, a literary structure where where the theme of the first section of a passage is repeated in the second. https://www.howthebiblefitstogether.org/files/Luke-17.33a-Chiasm.pdf

The Chiasm of Luke 17:22-25

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in reverse order in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 17:22-25 the center and climax is in the days leading up to the second coming believers are not

The Chiasm of Luke 17:20-21

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in reverse order in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 17:20-21 the center and climax is that the kingdom of God was not coming with observable signs (Luke

The Chiasm of Luke 17:11-19

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 17:11-19 the center and climax is that the one healed leper who came back to thank Jesus for healing him was

The Chiasm of Luke 17:1-2

A chiasm is a literary structure where themes of the first section of a passage are repeated in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 17:1-2 the center and climax is the curse of causing a little one to stumble (Luke 17:1b-2a). https://www.howthebiblefitstogether.org/files/Luke-17.1-2a-Chiasm.pdf

The Chiasms of Luke 16:19-31: The Rich Man and Lazarus

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in reverse order in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. Luke 16:19-31 contains four chiasms: 16:29-22; 23-26; 27-29; and 30-31. https://www.howthebiblefitstogether.org/files/Luke-16.19-31a-Chiasms.pdf

The Chiasm of Luke 16:14-15

A chiasm is a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. In Luke 16:14-15 the center and climax is that God knows our hearts (Luke 16:15b) https://www.howthebiblefitstogether.org/files/Luke-16.14-15a-Chiasm.pdf

The Chiasm of Luke 16:13

Luke 16:13 is a chiasm, a literary structure where vocabulary of the first section of a passage is repeated in reverse order in the second. The center of the chiasm is typically the climax of the passage. Here the center gives the reasons why one cannot serve two masters. https://www.howthebiblefitstogether.org/files/Luke-16.13a-Chiasm.pdf