“For our present troubles are small and won’t last very long. Yet they produce for us a glory that vastly outweighs them and will last forever! So we don’t look at the troubles we can see now; rather, we fix our gaze on things that cannot be seen. For the things we see now will soon be gone, but the things we cannot see will last forever.” — 2 Corinthians 4:17-18.
Suffering has a way of narrowing our vision. When we are in pain—whether physical, emotional, relational, or spiritual—it can feel as if the moment we are living in is the only moment that exists. The trial becomes our entire horizon. The hardship feels permanent.
Yet Scripture gently lifts our chin and redirects our gaze.
In Romans 8:18, the apostle Paul writes, “Yet what we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will reveal to us later.” That is a staggering statement. Paul does not deny suffering. He does not minimize it. He endured imprisonment, beatings, shipwreck, betrayal, and constant danger. His suffering was real. But he places it on a scale next to eternal glory—and the scale tips decisively toward glory.
The key to endurance is perspective.
If this life is all there is, then suffering is ultimate. But if eternity awaits us—if Christ has secured for us an imperishable inheritance—then suffering is temporary. It is not meaningless, but neither is it final. The pain of today does not have the last word. Jesus does.
In 2 Corinthians 4:16–18, Paul encourages believers not to lose heart despite suffering and outward decline. Though our physical bodies are weakening, our inner spiritual life is being renewed daily. Paul shifts the focus from what is seen to what is unseen. The visible hardships of this world are temporary, but the unseen realities of eternity are lasting. Therefore, believers endure suffering with hope because their trials are not meaningless—they are preparing them for eternal glory. The passage calls Christians to live with eternal perspective: to anchor their faith not in present circumstances, but in the lasting promises of God.
Paul is not calling cancer light. He is not calling persecution small. He is comparing time to eternity. Even decades of suffering shrink when measured against forever. This does not mean we pretend everything is fine. Christians are not called to deny pain. Jesus Himself wept. He groaned. He suffered deeply. But Hebrews tells us that “for the joy set before Him He endured the cross.” Jesus endured because He looked beyond the cross to resurrection, redemption, and restored glory.
We are invited to do the same.
One day, faith will become sight. One day, every tear will be wiped away. One day, what feels crushing now will be seen as a brief chapter in a much larger story of redemption. The reward awaiting God’s children is not merely relief from pain—it is the fullness of joy in His presence.
Discussion Questions:
- What “seen” circumstances in your life are most tempting to focus on right now, and how might fixing your eyes on the “unseen” eternal promises of God change your response to them?
- Paul calls present troubles “light and momentary” compared to eternal glory—how does an eternal perspective practically help us endure suffering without losing heart?