“Thus says the LORD: ‘Let not the wise man boast in his wisdom,
let not the mighty man boast in his might,
let not the rich man boast in his riches,
but let him who boasts boast in this,
that he understands and knows Me,
that I am the LORD who practices steadfast love, justice, and righteousness in the earth.
For in these things I delight,’ declares the LORD.”
Jeremiah 9:23–24 speaks straight into the heart of a people who trusted everything but God. Judah prided itself on wisdom, alliances, military strength, and wealth, even as the nation drifted far from the LORD. Judgment was approaching, yet many still felt secure because of what they had and what they knew.
Into that false security, God cuts with a simple, dividing word: do not boast in wisdom, strength, or riches. Boast in this: that you understand and know the LORD. He does not simply forbid boasting; He redirects it. The question is not whether your heart will boast, but what your heart will boast in.
These verses expose how easily people measure their lives by the wrong things:
- How clever they are
- How strong they appear
- How much they own
But God says none of these are solid ground. Wisdom can fail, strength can fade, riches can vanish. The only boast that will survive judgment and eternity is this: “I know the LORD — the One who delights in steadfast love, justice, and righteousness.”
Knowing Him is not just information about God. It is a real relationship, a deepening understanding of His character, His ways, and His heart. That relationship becomes the one true treasure that relativizes everything else.
These verses call you to step out of the world’s scoreboard and into God’s. The question is not, “How impressive am I?” but, “Do I truly know the LORD who delights in love, justice, and righteousness?”
The Verse Inside the Story of Redemption
Jeremiah spoke these words into a landscape of collapsing confidence. The people had:
- Prophets who said “Peace, peace” when there was no peace
- Leaders who trusted foreign powers and political maneuvers
- Priests who went through religious motions while their hearts were far from God
On the surface, there was religion, culture, and brilliance. Underneath, there was rot. The LORD was about to send His people into exile, stripping away everything they had trusted in.
Jeremiah 9:23–24 stands like a prophetic surgery. It lays out three false foundations:
- Human wisdom — insight, strategy, cleverness
- Human might — military strength, influence, power
- Human riches — security in wealth and resources
Then it takes the knife deeper:
- None of these are wrong in themselves
- All of them are lethal when they become your boast
At the center of Scripture, God keeps insisting that what He desires is not impressive credentials but humble hearts that know Him:
- He chose Abraham, not because Abraham was great, but because God set His love on him.
- He humbled Pharaoh, who trusted in power, and raised up a fragile people no one expected.
- He preserved a remnant in exile, not because they were strong, but because He is faithful.
Jeremiah 9:23–24 gathers that whole theme and puts it in a few sharp lines:
- True security is not what you know, but Whom you know.
- True greatness is not what you build, but that you belong to the LORD who delights in steadfast love, justice, and righteousness.
These verses also prepare the way for the Gospel. When Christ comes, the same collision appears again:
- Religious leaders proud of their knowledge, status, and interpretations
- Crowds impressed with signs and power
- Disciples tempted to argue over greatness
But the cross exposes and overturns all of it. At the cross:
- Human wisdom calls it foolishness
- Human strength sees only weakness
- Human calculation sees loss
Yet there, in what looks like defeat, God displays His deepest wisdom, strongest power, and richest grace. In Christ crucified and risen, the LORD shows His steadfast love, justice, and righteousness perfectly joined:
- Steadfast love — He does not abandon sinners
- Justice — sin is truly judged and not ignored
- Righteousness — He remains Holy and yet justifies the ungodly in Christ
To boast in the LORD, in New Testament terms, is to boast in the cross of Christ — to say with your life, “My hope, my identity, my worth, and my future rest in Him, not in me.”
Jeremiah 9:23–24, read through the Gospel, sounds like an early echo of that final word:
- Do not boast in your wisdom. Boast in the One who is made wisdom for you.
- Do not boast in your might. Boast in the Lamb who was slain and now reigns.
- Do not boast in your riches. Boast in the inheritance you have in Christ that cannot perish, spoil, or fade.
Knowing the LORD, then, is not a vague spirituality. It is to know Him as He has revealed Himself in His Son — the One in whom steadfast love, justice, and righteousness meet perfectly.
The Verse in the Life of the Believer
For a believer today, Jeremiah 9:23–24 is both a mirror and a map. It shows you where your heart drifts and it shows you where your heart belongs.
First, it acts as a mirror. If you listen closely, you may hear echoes of these false boasts in your own soul:
- “I am okay because I understand more than others.”
- “I am safe because I am strong, capable, and resilient.”
- “I am secure because I have enough savings, plans, or resources.”
These are subtle. You may not say them out loud, but they often show up in your reactions:
- Panic when your understanding is challenged
- Fear when your strength weakens
- Deep anxiety when finances tighten
Jeremiah 9:23–24 is not trying to shame you for feeling these things. It is inviting you to trace those feelings back to their root and hear the LORD’s gentle but firm call:
“Let not the wise man boast in his wisdom… but let him who boasts boast in this, that he understands and knows Me.”
Second, it acts as a map. It shows you what a God-centered life really celebrates. The verse does not say, “Know Me so you can use Me to keep your old boasts intact.” It says, “Know Me — know who I am, what I delight in, and let that become your joy and confidence.”
God Himself tells you what He delights in:
- Steadfast love — loyal, covenant love that does not let go
- Justice — His right judgments, His faithfulness to truth
- Righteousness — His perfect character and His right ordering of all things
To “understand and know” Him means:
- To trust His steadfast love when you feel unlovable
- To submit to His justice even when it cuts against you
- To cherish His righteousness instead of resenting His holiness
Practically, this shifts how you walk through ordinary days:
- When you succeed, you can say, “Thank You, LORD — my boast is not that I am wise, but that I know You gave this wisdom and opportunity.”
- When you feel weak, you can say, “My strength was never meant to be my boast. My boast is that I know the LORD who is faithful and strong.”
- When resources rise or fall, you can say, “Riches were never my foundation. My security is that I know the God who delights in love, justice, and righteousness.”
It also changes what you most want for others. Instead of primarily wanting people to think you are impressive, you begin to want them to see that the LORD is beautiful — that His character is more solid than any achievement you could present.
You can even use this verse as a quiet diagnostic at the end of the day:
- What did I boast in today — even just in my thoughts?
- What, if taken away, would make me feel like I no longer have a self?
- Where did I rest most easily — in what I can do, or in who He is?
Jeremiah 9:23–24 gently keeps leading you back to the same center:
- Your greatest treasure is that you know the LORD.
- Your greatest security is that He has set His steadfast love on you in Christ.
- Your greatest identity is not “wise,” “strong,” or “rich,” but “one who knows Him.”
As this sinks in over time, it frees you:
- Free to learn without needing to be the smartest.
- Free to serve without needing to be the strongest.
- Free to steward resources without needing them to define your worth.
You become someone whose life quietly points away from self and toward the God who delights in steadfast love, justice, and righteousness — the God who revealed that heart most clearly at the cross and empty tomb.
Resting in the God Who Is Our Only True Boast
Keep Exploring God’s Word on This Theme
If this verse spoke to you, these related passages will help you keep going deeper into who Christ is and what it means to trust Him.
When you need encouragement to keep trusting and resting in the LORD:
How Jeremiah 9:23 Reorders Trust in Daily Life
Jeremiah 9:23 does not leave faith as a vague religious feeling. It locates trust in the reality of God rather than in the instability of self. That is important because the heart is always tempted to relocate confidence into moods, visible outcomes, or personal strength. This verse interrupts that drift. It teaches that faith becomes healthy when it rests on the Lord’s character and promises, not on the believer’s ability to manufacture certainty. When read that way, Jeremiah 9:23 is not asking for inward heroics. It is calling for humble dependence that keeps returning to the stronger word of God.
In practice, that kind of trust reshapes daily decisions. It steadies the believer in disappointment, keeps prayer from collapsing into panic, and guards obedience from becoming merely situational. The Christian who lives under the truth of Jeremiah 9:23 can move forward without pretending to control the future. That does not remove pain or pressure, but it does give the heart a better center. The verse becomes a living guide for perseverance because it reminds the believer that God is worthy of confidence before the results are visible.
A Better Ground for Glorying
Human boasting keeps searching for something visible to lean on: intellect, status, influence, achievement, or spiritual appearance. Jeremiah tears those supports away and gives the soul something far better. To know the Lord is greater than possessing impressive advantages because it joins the heart to the One who delights in steadfast love, justice, and righteousness. This turns boasting into worship. The believer’s confidence is no longer built on fragile personal distinction, but on the mercy of being brought near to God Himself.
Read Next in Connected Verses
This study belongs inside a wider conversation in Jeremiah. Follow these nearby passages and connected studies to keep the context, doctrine, and application tied together.
Jeremiah 9:23–24 Meaning — Let the One Who Boasts Boast in the LORD
This nearby verse in the same chapter sharpens the immediate context and movement of thought.
Jeremiah 17:7 Meaning — Blessed Is the One Who Trusts in the LORD
This related study elsewhere in Jeremiah helps carry the book’s wider themes and message forward.
Jeremiah 29:11 Meaning — “For I Know the Plans I Have for You”
This related study elsewhere in Jeremiah helps carry the book’s wider themes and message forward.
1 Peter 5:9 Meaning — Stand Firm in the Faith, Knowing the Family of Believers Shares These Sufferings
This related study deepens the connected theme of knowing from another angle inside the series.


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