Verse of the Day for July 11, 2026
Jeremiah 32:17
Nothing Too Hard for the Lord
“Ah Lord Yahweh! Behold, you have made the heavens and the earth by your great power and by your outstretched arm. There is nothing too hard for you.”
The Word Before Us
Jeremiah 32:17 is a prayer spoken from a place where faith had to stand in the face of difficult circumstances. Jeremiah looks beyond the trouble before him and remembers the power of the Lord who made the heavens and the earth.
There are seasons when life asks us to trust God while the evidence around us seems uncertain, painful, or unfinished. We may believe that God is powerful, yet still feel the weight of grief, fear, waiting, or disappointment. This verse does not deny the burden of those moments. Instead, it teaches us where to look while we carry them. The God who stretched out the heavens and formed the earth by his power is not helpless before the things that overwhelm us. There is nothing too hard for him.
Understanding the Context
This passage comes from the prophet Jeremiah during one of the darkest periods in Judah’s history. Jerusalem was under threat from Babylon, judgment was near, and Jeremiah himself was confined in the court of the guard because he had faithfully spoken the word of the Lord. Everything around him seemed to point toward loss, collapse, and exile.
In that setting, God told Jeremiah to do something that must have looked strange: purchase a field in Anathoth. It was a sign of future hope. Although judgment was coming and the land would soon be devastated, God was declaring that houses, fields, and vineyards would one day be possessed again in the land. Jeremiah obeyed the Lord’s command, but then he prayed. His prayer begins with worship: “Ah Lord Yahweh!” Before Jeremiah speaks of confusion, questions, or trouble, he remembers who God is.
Jeremiah’s words are not abstract theology. They are faith spoken in the middle of crisis. He confesses that the Lord made the heavens and the earth by great power and an outstretched arm. That phrase recalls God’s mighty acts of creation and deliverance. The God who creates is also the God who redeems. The God who rules over nations is also the God who keeps his promises.
When Jeremiah says, “There is nothing too hard for you,” he is not saying that life is easy. He is saying that no situation is beyond the reach of God’s power, wisdom, and covenant faithfulness. Even exile, judgment, grief, and ruin cannot cancel the purposes of the Lord.
Living the Verse Today
Jeremiah 32:17 speaks tenderly to daily Christian life because we often stand where Jeremiah stood: between what God has promised and what we can presently see. We may look at our circumstances and wonder how restoration could come. We may look at grief and wonder how comfort can reach that deeply. We may look at weakness and wonder how endurance can continue. We may look at a broken relationship, a weary heart, a difficult season, or an uncertain future and quietly ask whether anything good can still grow there.
This verse invites us to begin where Jeremiah began: with God. Before we measure the size of the problem, we remember the greatness of the Lord. Before we surrender to despair, we look to the One who made heaven and earth. Before we decide that nothing can change, we confess that nothing is too hard for him.
That does not mean God always answers in the way we expect or on the timeline we would choose. Jeremiah’s obedience did not make the siege disappear. Judah still faced judgment. Exile still came. Yet God’s promise was not defeated. His purposes reached beyond the immediate sorrow. He was already planting hope in the soil of a future Jeremiah could not yet see.
This is often how faith works in us. God may not remove every burden at once, but he teaches us to trust his power within the burden. He may not explain every sorrow, but he holds us while we grieve. He may not show us the whole path ahead, but he gives enough grace for the next faithful step. In Christ, we see most clearly that nothing is too hard for God. Sin is not too deep for his mercy. Death is not too strong for his resurrection. Sorrow is not too hidden for his comfort. Weakness is not too great for his sustaining grace.
For those enduring hardship, Jeremiah 32:17 gives permission to pray honestly and worship deeply at the same time. Faith is not the absence of questions. Faith is bringing those questions before the Lord whose power is greater than our understanding. Jeremiah obeyed, prayed, remembered, and trusted. We are invited to do the same.
Today, this verse calls us to place our impossible things before God. Not with presumption, not with demand, but with reverent trust. The Lord who made the heavens and the earth is near to his people. His arm is not shortened. His wisdom is not exhausted. His mercy has not failed. There is nothing too hard for him.
Reflection
What burden, fear, grief, or unanswered question do I need to place before the Lord today, trusting that nothing is too hard for him?
If you have been enjoying my Scripture study, The Word Before Us, I’m grateful to share that my devotional book, The Word Before Us, is now available on Amazon:
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This two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections is written to help readers slow down, listen carefully to Scripture, and begin each day rooted in the grace, hope, and wisdom of Christ.
The Bible texts are from the World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM. All rights reserved.

