God challenged Jeremiah to find just one righteous person so that judgment might be withheld. Jeremiah searched the streets, the markets, and the homes of Jerusalem and found no one. Thinking perhaps the issue was ignorance, he turned to the educated and influential. Surely those who “know the way of the LORD” would be different. Yet Jeremiah 5:5 records his discovery: “But they all alike had broken the yoke and burst the bonds.” The problem was not a lack of knowledge but a refusal to live by it. Ryken describes them as oxen that have deliberately thrown off their yoke. Their disobedience was not accidental. It was chosen. Jeremiah’s search reveals something uncomfortable: sin is not confined to a group or a class. It runs through everyone, regardless of status or understanding.
That realization has a way of following us into daily life. There is a difference between not knowing and knowing better. I remember hearing those familiar words growing up: “You know better than that.” They usually came at moments when I had done exactly what I knew I should not do. There is something about that phrase that removes all room for excuses. It points directly to the heart of the issue. It is easier to believe that problems are caused by lack of opportunity, lack of education, or lack of resources. Those things matter, but they do not fully explain human behavior. As one writer observed, the problem is deeper. It touches every age, every background, and every level of society. I have noticed that even with good intentions and clear understanding, the right choice does not always follow. Knowledge does not automatically produce obedience, which can be a humbling discovery.
The New Testament speaks directly into this reality. Paul writes, “There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:22-23). Jeremiah’s search confirms what Paul later explains. No one stands apart. Yet the same phrase appears again with a different tone. “For there is no difference between Jew and Gentile… for, ‘Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved’” (Romans 10:12-13). The lack of distinction in sin is matched by the lack of distinction in grace. Paul adds, “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Where Jeremiah could not find one righteous person, the gospel presents One who is righteous and who gives that righteousness to others. In Him, the problem is addressed, and the answer is made available to all.
