What does Jeremiah 6:7 mean?
What is the meaning of Jeremiah 6:7?

As a well gushes its water

– The image is intentional: a well cannot help but overflow; its contents rise to the surface without effort.

– In the same way, Judah’s sin is not an occasional lapse but a steady, natural outpouring.

Jeremiah 2:13 describes the Lord as “the spring of living water,” highlighting the contrast between God’s pure source and Judah’s polluted flow.

• Jesus promises “a spring of water welling up to eternal life” in John 4:14, underscoring God’s design for life-giving overflow, not corruption.

Matthew 12:34 reminds us, “For out of the overflow of the heart the mouth speaks,” confirming that what springs up reveals the heart’s true state.


so she pours out her evil

– The pronoun “she” refers to Jerusalem, the capital that should have modeled covenant faithfulness.

– Evil gushes as freely as water—systemic, pervasive, and deliberate.

Genesis 6:5 notes that “every inclination of the thoughts of their hearts was altogether evil all the time,” showing sin’s ancient pattern.

Jeremiah 4:14 urges, “Wash the evil from your heart… so that you may be saved,” revealing God’s desire for cleansing.

Romans 3:12 echoes, “There is no one who does good,” confirming the universal need for redemption.


Violence and destruction resound in her

– The city’s streets echo with turmoil; injustice is audible, not hidden.

Habakkuk 1:3 laments, “Destruction and violence are before me; strife and conflict abound.”

Micah 6:12 says, “For her rich men are filled with violence,” spotlighting social decay.

Jeremiah 7:11 exposes the temple itself: “Has this house… become a den of robbers?” The corruption pollutes even worship.


sickness and wounds are ever before Me

– God sees moral disease that no human remedy can cure.

Isaiah 1:5-6 portrays a nation “from the sole of the foot to the head—no spot is uninjured.”

Jeremiah 30:12 admits, “Your injury is incurable… there is no remedy for your wound,” driving Judah to seek divine healing.

Psalm 38:5 confesses, “My wounds fester and are loathsome because of my sinful folly,” linking physical imagery with spiritual reality.


summary

Jeremiah 6:7 paints a sober portrait: Judah’s sin gushes like water, producing relentless violence and leaving the nation spiritually diseased. The Lord, who sees all, exposes this condition not to condemn without hope but to press His people toward repentance and the cleansing only He can provide.

What does Jeremiah 6:6 reveal about God's expectations for His people?
Top of Page
Top of Page