Of all the names of God revealed in Scripture, Jehovah Tsidkenu carries some of the most direct and practical weight for the person who has ever struggled to feel worthy before God.
It means: the Lord our righteousness.
Not the Lord who demands righteousness from us.
Not the Lord who grades our righteousness and decides whether it is sufficient.
The Lord, who is himself our righteousness, who provides what we cannot produce.
This name appears in one of the darkest prophetic passages in the Old Testament and shines against that darkness like a clean light.
Where the Name Appears: The Original Context
The Prophecy of Jeremiah 23
Jehovah Tsidkenu appears twice in the book of Jeremiah, first in chapter 23 and again in chapter 33.
“Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. In his days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely. And this is the name by which he will be called: ‘The LORD is our righteousness.'” — ESV, Jeremiah 23:5–6
The context matters enormously.
Jeremiah was prophesying at a time when the shepherds of Israel, the kings and priests meant to lead the people toward God, had catastrophically failed.
Jeremiah 23 opens with a devastating indictment of these failed leaders.
“Woe to the shepherds who destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture! declares the LORD.” — ESV, Jeremiah 23:1
The people had been led into unfaithfulness by leaders who were themselves unrighteous. The nation was heading toward Babylonian captivity precisely because the human structures meant to maintain righteousness had collapsed.
Into that context, God announced a coming king whose name would be Jehovah Tsidkenu.
Not a king who would demand better behavior. A king who would himself be the righteousness his people lacked.
The Second Appearance in Jeremiah 33
The name appears again when Jeremiah was in prison, with Jerusalem under siege and the Babylonian destruction imminent.
“In those days and at that time I will cause a righteous Branch to spring up for David, and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. In those days Judah will be saved, and Jerusalem will dwell securely. And this is the name by which it will be called: ‘The LORD is our righteousness.'” — ESV, Jeremiah 33:15–16
The second appearance is significant for a different reason: in Jeremiah 33, the name is applied to Jerusalem itself.
The city whose people would be saved would carry this name, suggesting that Jehovah Tsidkenu was not merely a personal promise to individuals but a transforming designation for the entire community of the redeemed.
Breaking Down the Name: What Each Component Means
Jehovah: The Covenant Name of God
Jehovah is the anglicization of YHWH, the divine name God revealed to Moses in Exodus 3:14 when he declared “I AM WHO I AM.”
YHWH carries the weight of self-existence, covenant faithfulness, and personal presence.
When the name Jehovah Tsidkenu was announced, the people hearing it understood immediately that the righteousness being promised was not a human achievement or a religious system. It was an expression of the covenant-keeping God himself.
Tsidkenu: Our Righteousness
The Hebrew root is tsedek, meaning rightness, straightness, conformity to a standard.
In legal contexts, it describes the one who is found innocent, whose case has been vindicated. In moral contexts, it describes the person whose life aligns with God’s standard.
The addition of the suffix “enu” makes it possessive and communal: not just righteousness in the abstract, but our righteousness.
The two elements together form something theologically staggering: the covenant God himself becomes the rightness, the alignment, the vindication that his people cannot achieve on their own.
What Jehovah Tsidkenu Means for Salvation
The Problem It Addresses
The problem Jehovah Tsidkenu addresses is the most fundamental problem in the Bible: human beings are not righteous, and God cannot have fellowship with what is not righteous.
Isaiah stated it with precision.
“We have all become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a polluted garment.” — ESV, Isaiah 64:6
The problem is not merely that people sometimes do wrong things. The problem is that even the best human righteousness is corrupted at its source.
God’s standard is perfection. Human beings cannot meet it. The gap is total and unbridgeable from the human side.
Jehovah Tsidkenu is God’s announcement that he would bridge it from his side.
How Paul Explains the Fulfillment
The New Testament makes the connection between Jehovah Tsidkenu and Jesus Christ explicit.
“For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” — ESV, 2 Corinthians 5:21
This is the theological heart of what Jehovah Tsidkenu means in practice.
Christ took what humanity had, its sin and guilt, and gave what humanity lacked, his perfect righteousness.
The transaction is total. The sin is fully placed on Christ. The righteousness is fully credited to the believer.
This is what theologians call imputed righteousness, and it is the mechanism through which Jehovah Tsidkenu operates in the life of every person who trusts Christ.
The Contrast With Self-Righteousness
Paul described his own pre-conversion posture in Philippians 3, where he catalogued an impressive religious resume, and then called all of it garbage compared to what Jehovah Tsidkenu provided.
“Not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith.” — ESV, Philippians 3:9
The name Jehovah Tsidkenu is the answer to every attempt to earn God’s approval through performance.
It declares that the righteousness God requires is not something you build. It is something you receive.
Why Jehovah Tsidkenu Is Important Today
It Settles the Question of Standing Before God
Every believer who has wondered whether they are acceptable to God, whether their failures have placed them outside his favor, whether their accumulated sins outweigh their growth, needs this name.
The standing before God is not determined by your righteousness. It is determined by his.
Romans 8:1 carries the same weight as Jehovah Tsidkenu: “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”
The condemnation is gone, not because the believer has improved enough, but because the righteousness they need has been provided by the Lord who is their righteousness.
It Reorients Worship From Performance to Reception
A person who does not understand Jehovah Tsidkenu tends to approach God as though the quality of their week determines the quality of their access.
Good week: confident in prayer. Bad week: hesitant, distant, vaguely ashamed.
The name corrects this completely. Access to God is not based on what you have performed but on what he has provided.
Worship rooted in Jehovah Tsidkenu is worship that comes freely, knowing that the one you are approaching is himself your righteousness.
It Provides Stability in Seasons of Moral Failure
When a believer sins, the enemy’s accusation is immediate: you have lost your standing, you are unworthy, God is displeased with you.
Jehovah Tsidkenu is the specific name that answers that accusation.
The standing is not in your performance. It is in the name of the Lord who is your righteousness.
This does not make sin trivial. It makes the recovery from sin accessible. You do not rebuild your standing through subsequent good behavior. You return to the righteousness that was always there, provided by the Lord who is Jehovah Tsidkenu.
The Righteous Branch: Connecting the Name to Christ
Jeremiah’s prophecy names Jehovah Tsidkenu as a king who would be raised up for David, described as a righteous Branch.
The Branch is a messianic title appearing multiple times in the prophets, always describing the coming king from David’s line who would fulfill what the Davidic covenant had promised.
“For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.” — ESV, Isaiah 9:6
Jesus is the righteous Branch. He is the king who came, who is called Jehovah Tsidkenu, because he did not merely teach righteousness or model it. He became it for those who were united to him by faith.
What People Ask About Jehovah Tsidkenu
What does Jehovah Tsidkenu mean in English?
It means “the Lord our righteousness.” Jehovah refers to the covenant name YHWH, meaning “I AM” or the self-existent God. Tsidkenu comes from the Hebrew root tsedek, meaning righteousness or conformity to a standard, with the possessive suffix meaning “our.” Together, the name declares that God himself is the righteousness his people need.
Where does the name Jehovah Tsidkenu appear in the Bible?
It appears twice in Jeremiah: first in Jeremiah 23:6, applied to the coming messianic king, and again in Jeremiah 33:16, applied to the redeemed Jerusalem. Both occurrences are in prophetic contexts announcing God’s solution to Israel’s spiritual failure through a righteous Branch from David’s lineage.
How is Jehovah Tsidkenu connected to Jesus Christ?
Jesus is the fulfillment of the righteous Branch that Jeremiah prophesied. Second Corinthians 5:21 explains the mechanism: Christ became sin on the cross so that believers might become the righteousness of God in him. Philippians 3:9 contrasts self-righteousness with the righteousness that comes through faith in Christ, which is imputed to the believer.
What is the difference between Jehovah Tsidkenu and earning righteousness?
Earning righteousness means attempting to achieve the standing God requires through personal obedience and religious performance. Jehovah Tsidkenu declares that the righteousness God requires is provided by God himself through Christ. Philippians 3:9 calls earned righteousness a person’s own righteousness and contrasts it with the righteousness from God that depends on faith.
Why is Jehovah Tsidkenu important for believers today?
Because it settles the question of how a person stands before God. Believers do not stand before God based on how well they have performed. They stand based on the righteousness of the Lord, who is their righteousness. This provides stability in seasons of failure and a foundation for worship that does not fluctuate with behavior.
Lord, You Are My Righteousness, and I Rest in That
Father, I have spent time trying to build a standing before you out of my own efforts.
My obedience on good days, my remorse on bad ones, my religious activity as though the accumulation of it would eventually tip the scale in my favor.
Jehovah Tsidkenu says something entirely different.
You are my righteousness.
Not a righteousness I earn and present to you, but the righteousness you provide and credit to me through Christ.
Let me rest in that today.
Not the rest of laziness but the rest of someone who has stopped trying to pay a debt that has already been paid.
When the enemy accuses me, let this name be louder.
When my failures make me hesitate to approach you, remind me that my approach was never based on my performance.
You are Jehovah Tsidkenu.
That is enough.
In Jesus’ name, amen.
Theological and Biblical References
Motyer, J. A. (1999). The prophecy of Isaiah: An introduction and commentary. InterVarsity Press.
Holladay, W. L. (1986). Jeremiah 1: A commentary on the book of the prophet Jeremiah, chapters 1–25. Fortress Press.
Schreiner, T. R. (1998). Romans: Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament. Baker Academic.
Grudem, W. (2009). Systematic theology: An introduction to biblical doctrine. Zondervan.
Packer, J. I. (1973). Knowing God. InterVarsity Press.
Moo, D. J. (1996). The Epistle to the Romans: New International Commentary on the New Testament. Eerdmans.
Stott, J. R. W. (1986). The cross of Christ. InterVarsity Press.
Tozer, A. W. (1961). The knowledge of the holy. HarperCollins.
