We live in a world that seems to reward noise. From politicians to athletes to influencers, the message is the same: promote yourself, celebrate yourself, trust yourself. Even ordinary people feel the pressure to live a life worth boasting about. Yet for all the noise, something inside us knows the truth—boasting is a fragile shield. It cracks the moment the pressures of life expose our weakness.
A quiet but unmistakable fact runs through the whole Bible. When a person finally stands before God, they will have nothing to boast about.
The gospel speaks about this with a clarity that startles and is liberating. When we meet God, boasting will be excluded. Not reduced. Not moderated. Excluded.
The End of Self‑Confidence
Paul writes, "That no flesh should boast before God" (1 Corinthians 1:29). It's a sobering thought. The very things we cling to—our achievements, our morality, our religious efforts—collapse in the presence of a holy God. Abraham himself, the great patriarch of faith, had nothing in his natural life that could earn him favour (Romans 4:2). If he couldn't boast, who can?
This is where the gospel begins: with the honest admission that we bring nothing. Not a shred of righteousness. Not a drop of merit. Not a single reason for God to accept us.
And strangely, this is not the point where hope ends—it's where it begins.