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What Is the Most Quoted Bible Verse of All Time?

Short answer: the verse most often named, searched for, and shared is John 3:16. Across Bible apps, search data, and social sharing, John 3:16 repeatedly appears at or near the top of popularity lists. That said, other verses—especially Jeremiah 29:11, Psalm 23, Romans 8:28, and Philippians 4:13—regularly surface as the "most shared" in particular contexts (comfort cards, graduations, and encouragement memes). The difference comes down to what "most quoted" means—search queries, social posts, app bookmarks, or printed inscriptions—and why certain lines of Scripture stick in people’s memory.

What the data actually measures

When writers or platforms claim a verse is "most quoted," they usually mean one of several metrics:

  • Search interest: how often people Google a verse or its reference.
  • Bible app activity: bookmarks, highlights, and reading plans inside apps like YouVersion.
  • Website traffic: which passages are opened or linked most on major Bible sites.
  • Social sharing: verses posted as images, memes, or quotes on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
  • Printed presence: inscriptions on signs, tattoos, flyers, and stadium banners.

Different metrics give different winners. But when you combine these large datasets, John 3:16 emerges as the consistent frontrunner. That consistency is why most lists call it the most quoted Bible verse of all time.

Why John 3:16 rises to the top

There are a few clear reasons John 3:16 is so often quoted and shared:

  • Simplicity and summary: it compresses the gospel into a single memorable line, which makes it easy to recall and repeat.
  • Evangelistic use: it’s routinely used in personal witnessing, evangelistic literature, and at public events—think signs at sports games, tracts, and bumper stickers.
  • Memorability: short, rhythmic, and emotionally resonant lines lodge in the memory better than long paragraphs.
  • Cultural resonance: decades of preaching, hymnody, and Christian education have trained people to reach for this verse when asked to "recite a Bible verse."

[John 3:16] (we're still translating this passage)

To appreciate how John 3:16 functions in Scripture, it helps to read the verses around it. Jesus’ words to Nicodemus are about rebirth, belief, and the way God’s love unfolds in saving action.

[John 3:1-21] (we're still translating this passage)

Why Jeremiah 29:11 and other verses are also "most quoted"

Not every "most quoted" list looks the same. For people seeking comfort, encouragement, or direction, Old Testament promises often rank highest. Jeremiah 29:11 is a prime example.

[Jeremiah 29:11] (we're still translating this passage)

Reasons it’s widely shared:

  • Comfort and hope: it speaks of plans for welfare and a hopeful future—ideal for cards, commencement addresses, and pastoral encouragement.
  • Context stripped: its uplifting sentence form makes it easy to cut out of its original historical setting and apply directly to individual circumstances.

But that very ease of quotation is why context matters. Jeremiah’s words were written to exiles in Babylon and come with an instruction to seek the welfare of the city and to wait on God’s timing—not a private prosperity promise. Reading the fuller passage restores sober, faithful meaning.

[Jeremiah 29:4-14] (we're still translating this passage)

Other frequent contenders and where they appear

Across platforms you’ll also see these verses repeatedly:

  • Psalm 23—favorited in funerals, comforting images, and pastoral ministry.
  • [Psalm 23:1-6] (we're still translating this passage)

  • Romans 8:28—used in sermons and encouragements about God’s providence.
  • [Romans 8:28] (we're still translating this passage)

  • Philippians 4:13—quoted a lot in motivational contexts and sports culture.
  • Philippians 4:13

    I can handle anything because the One who gives me strength is with me.

Each of these verses thrives in particular cultural roles. Psalm 23 comforts in grief. Romans 8:28 reassures during suffering. Philippians 4:13 helps people feel equipped for challenge. John 3:16 functions as the gospel headline.

Limitations of "most quoted" lists—and a pastoral caution

Three cautions about treating any single verse as a spiritual talisman:

  1. Different datasets tell different stories. A verse might be top on Google but not the most highlighted inside a Bible app for long-form study.
  2. Quotability isn’t the same as faithful interpretation. Short snippets can be moving but also misleading if pulled from context.
  3. Popularity can reflect cultural usage more than theological depth. A well-known line can be loved and yet poorly understood.

That last point is pastoral more than academic: Scripture’s power grows when we place a beloved verse back into its context and let the full passage shape what the line means in our lives.

How to use this knowledge well

If you find yourself turning to the same verses over and over, a few simple practices will deepen your faithfulness:

  • Read around the verse. Take five minutes to read the whole chapter or letter that contains the line you love.
  • Ask the historical question: Who was this written to? Why? How does that change how I apply it today?
  • Memorize with context: pair a favorite verse with a short note about its setting so your memory holds the fuller meaning.
  • Use a modern, readable translation for clarity. A clear translation helps you hear the rhythm and intent of the sentence instead of stumbling over archaic words.

For readers who want a modern, readable English rendering that preserves the sense of the original, The Modern Text Bible offers clear language that helps verse memorization and faithful reading. When popular verses are presented with fresh, precise wording, their message often lands with new power.

Final reflection

Popularity tells us what people reach for in moments of need, joy, and encounter: the gospel summarized in a line, a promise of hope, a psalm of comfort, a word of assurance in suffering. John 3:16 is most often named the "most quoted" because it articulates the core of Christian hope in a single memorable sentence and because evangelism and culture have repeatedly amplified it.

But the best spiritual practice is not to crown a single verse as a talisman. It is to let beloved lines pull us deeper into the larger story—the love of God revealed in Christ, the faithful presence of God with exiles, mourners, and workers alike. Read the passages, breathe their context, and let the whole counsel of Scripture reshape how you live. If your next step is to re-read one of these passages slowly, choose a clear translation, read the surrounding verses, and listen for the Spirit’s guidance.

[John 3:16] (we're still translating this passage)

[Jeremiah 29:11] (we're still translating this passage)

[Psalm 23:1-6] (we're still translating this passage)

May the verses we quote most often be the ones that also form us most deeply.

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