Romans 1:10
Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you.
Cross-reference
In Romans 15:22–24, Paul explains he was hindered from coming and now hopes to visit on his way to Spain — directly fulfilling the prayer in Romans 1:10.
In Romans 15:30–32, Paul enlists prayer for his deliverance in Judea so that he may come to them by God's will — echoing the same phrase and request.
Romans 15:23 reveals Paul's longstanding desire to visit Rome, directly expanding on the prayer here.
Romans 15:32 again expresses Paul's hope to come by God's will, directly paralleling this prayer.
Acts 18:21 has Paul using the same 'if God wills' language for travel, echoing his submission here.
Acts 27:1 records Paul sailing to Italy, fulfilling the prayerful desire expressed here.
Acts 28:31 shows Paul preaching freely in Rome, the successful outcome of his prayer to come.
1 Corinthians 4:19 has Paul again conditioning his visit on the Lord's will, directly echoing this prayer.
In 1 Thessalonians 2:18, Paul states Satan hindered his desire to visit — mirroring the obstacle implied in Romans 1:10's plea for God's will.
In 1 Thessalonians 3:10, Paul prays earnestly day and night to see them face to face — parallel to his intense desire to visit Rome.
In 1 Thessalonians 3:11, Paul prays for God to direct their way to them — identical in theme to asking that by God's will he may come.
In Philemon 1:22, Paul hopes through prayers to be graciously given to them — a parallel request for a visit enabled by prayer.
In 1 Corinthians 16:7, Paul similarly expresses his hope to spend time with them 'if the Lord permits' — echoing the same deferential travel planning.
Acts 21:14 records disciples submitting to God's will for Paul, paralleling Paul's own attitude here.
James 4:15 gives the general principle of saying 'if the Lord wills', which Paul exemplifies here.