It depends largely what your requirements are. All languages have their strengths and weaknesses. There is no perfect language and making intelligent decisions about language choice is an important skill for a programmer.
I disagree with Charles that Jython can't replace Java because you can't implement Interfaces. In dynamic languages, it's seen as a feature that you don't need Interfaces (see duck typing).
Jython takes the great language features of Python and combines it with easy access to huge collection of Java libraries. However it does have a price in terms of overhead, and being a fairly new language you have less programmers and support to back you up.
The nice thing about Jython is that you can rewrite individual modules in Java if performance is a problem. The speed issue is less notable on servers where you can throw hardware at the problem. On mobile phones, performance is still key and I can't see Jython making a big impact there in the near future.
So will Jython replace Java? No, I don't think it will - the momentum behind Java is too great. But we will see increasingly more software with parts written in Jython and other languages targeting the JVM.