Bible Verses

Romans · Chapter 8 · Hope

Romans 8:18 — Bible Verse Meaning & Context

Hope is the anchor that holds when feelings cannot.

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Both translations, side by side

WEB · World English Bible

"For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which will be revealed toward us."

KJV · King James Version

"For1063 I reckon3049 that3754 the sufferings3804 of this present3568 time2540 are not3756 worthy514 to be compared with4314 the glory1391 which shall3195 be revealed601 in1519 us2248."

How the translations differ: The WEB is a modern public-domain revision of the 1901 ASV; the KJV dates to 1611. The KJV uses reckon, shall, while the WEB renders these as consider, will, toward. Both translate the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text — the differences are stylistic, not theological.

In context

Romans 8:18 in Romans 8

A Bible verse rarely stands alone. Here is Romans 8:18 read with the verses immediately before and after — the surrounding flow of Romans 8. Read the full chapter →

  1. v.16 The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God;
  2. v.17 and if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ; if indeed we suffer with him, that we may also be glorified with him.
  3. v.18 For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which will be revealed toward us.
  4. v.19 For the creation waits with eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed.
  5. v.20 For the creation was subjected to vanity, not of its own will, but because of him who subjected it, in hope

Book background

About the Book of Romans

Testament
New Testament
Genre
Pauline epistle
Author
Paul the apostle
Date written
c. 57 AD
Audience
The Christians at Rome (whom Paul had not yet met)
Chapters
16

Romans is Paul's most systematic exposition of the gospel — that all have sinned, are justified freely by faith in Christ apart from works, are united with Him in His death and resurrection, and live by the Spirit in confident assurance ("nothing can separate us from the love of God" — chapter 8). It has transformed every major Christian revival in history.

Setting: Written from Corinth on the eve of Paul's final trip to Jerusalem.

Key themes: righteousness · faith · justification · sin · gospel

Read Romans from the beginning →

Frequently asked

FAQ about Romans 8:18

What does Romans 8:18 say?

Romans 8:18 reads: "For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which will be revealed toward us." — from the New Testament, Romans (Pauline epistle). The full verse is shown above with both the World English Bible (WEB) and King James Version (KJV) translations side by side.

What book of the Bible is Romans 8:18 in?

Romans 8:18 is in the book of Romans, traditionally attributed to Paul the apostle and written around c. 57 AD. Romans is pauline epistle in the New Testament, originally addressed to The Christians at Rome (whom Paul had not yet met). Best known for "the just shall live by faith" and Romans 8:28.

What is Romans 8:18 about?

Romans 8:18 is primarily a Bible verse about Hope, with related themes including Grief. Within Romans, Romans is Paul's most systematic exposition of the gospel — that all have sinned, are justified freely by faith in Christ apart from works, are united with Him in His death and resurrection, and live by the Spirit in confident assurance ("nothing can separate us from the love of God" — chapter 8). Read the full passage above with surrounding context.

What is the difference between Romans 8:18 in WEB and KJV?

Romans 8:18 in the World English Bible (WEB) reads: "For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which will be revealed toward us.". The King James Version (KJV) reads: "For1063 I reckon3049 that3754 the sufferings3804 of this present3568 time2540 are not3756 worthy514 to be compared with4314 the glory1391 which shall3195 be revealed601 in1519 us2248.". The WEB is a modern public-domain translation that updates the KJV's 1611 English while keeping a similar formal-equivalence style. Both render the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text.

How long is Romans 8:18?

Romans 8:18 is 25 words in the WEB translation (134 characters), broken into 1 clause. It is a longer verse, often broken into smaller phrases for memorisation. Estimated reading time is about 8 seconds.

How can I memorise Romans 8:18?

To memorise Romans 8:18, split it into its 1 natural clause and learn one at a time. Repeat the full verse out loud five times, then write it from memory. Saving the verse as a photo wallpaper using our verse image studio helps daily review — the visual association with a memorable background dramatically improves recall.

Why does Romans 8:18 matter in Romans?

Romans is Paul's most systematic exposition of the gospel — that all have sinned, are justified freely by faith in Christ apart from works, are united with Him in His death and resurrection, and live by the Spirit in confident assurance ("nothing can separate us from the love of God" — chapter 8). It has transformed every major Christian revival in history. Romans 8:18 sits within this larger story — Romans as a whole emphasises righteousness, faith, justification.

How can I apply Romans 8:18 today?

Many readers use Romans 8:18 as a daily reminder verse — saving it as a phone wallpaper, sharing it on Pinterest, or memorising it for prayer. The verse studio on this page lets you download Romans 8:18 on 52 different backgrounds for free. Pair the verse with the surrounding chapter context shown above to understand its full meaning before applying it.

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