Bible Verse Picker

Random Verse from Jeremiah

1,364 verses across 52 chapters.

For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.

Jeremiah 29:11KJV

Drawing from 1,364 verses

Jeremiah is the longest prophetic book in the Bible by word count, stretching across 52 chapters of sermons, prayers, and raw honesty. It records the ministry of a man who spoke for God during the final decades before Jerusalem fell to Babylon in 586 BC.

The book is traditionally attributed to the prophet Jeremiah, working with his faithful scribe Baruch, who wrote his messages down. Jeremiah is often called the weeping prophet because he grieved openly over his people and never hid his own struggles from God.

That honesty is what makes the book feel so human. Jeremiah complains, doubts, laments, and keeps obeying anyway. His prayers give words to anyone who has ever felt worn out by doing the right thing.

Alongside the hard warnings sit some of the most loved promises in Scripture. Jeremiah 29:11 may be the most shared Bible verse on the internet, and the book also carries God's promise of a new covenant written on the heart, which the New Testament picks up directly.

A random verse from Jeremiah can go two ways, and both are valuable. You might get a promise about God's good plans, his everlasting love, or his power that finds nothing too hard. You might also get a challenge that asks something real of you.

Draw a verse above and see where you land. Jeremiah rewards people who want a faith that is honest about pain and still full of hope.

Frequently asked questions

Is Jeremiah 29:11 a promise for me personally?
It was first written in a letter to Jewish exiles in Babylon, promising that God had good plans for them after a long wait. Christians across traditions still read it as a true window into God's character, and reading the whole letter in Jeremiah 29 makes the verse feel deeper, not smaller.
Why is Jeremiah called the weeping prophet?
Because he grieved openly over Jerusalem and often poured out his sorrow to God. His tears show that faithfulness and heartbreak can live in the same person, which is a big part of why readers find him so relatable.