Romans 8:35

Romans 8:35

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?

King James Version (KJV)

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Context

Paul reaches the emotional peak of Romans 8, listing the severe hardships believers face and asserting that none of them can sever the believer from Christ's love.

What Does Romans 8:35 Mean?

Paul asks the climactic question of the chapter: who or what can separate us from the love of Christ? Then he lists the hardest things believers face -- tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, peril, sword. These are not abstract dangers; they were real threats to the early Christians and to Paul himself, who endured many of them. By naming them so specifically, Paul confronts the very experiences that might tempt a suffering believer to wonder whether Christ's love has failed or faded.

The form of the question expects the answer "none of these." Paul's point is that not one of these severe trials -- however painful -- can cut the believer off from the love of Christ. Suffering does not mean Christ has stopped loving us; affliction is not a sign of His abandonment. The love of Christ is so secure that even the worst earthly calamities cannot break it. In the verses that follow, Paul will declare with full confidence that nothing in all creation can separate us from God's love in Christ. This verse begins that triumphant crescendo, lifting the believer's eyes above present hardship to the unbreakable bond of Christ's love. Whatever comes, that love holds fast.

In the Original Language

"Separate" translates the Greek "chōrizō," to divide or part asunder. "Tribulation" renders "thlipsis," pressing affliction, and "sword" comes from "machaira," the weapon symbolizing violent death.

Application

When suffering tempts believers to doubt Christ's love, they can hold firm in the assurance that no hardship, however severe, can sever them from His love.

Related Verse Explanations

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