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Jeremiah 31

Everlasting Love, Restored Joy, and the New Covenant

The Lord who scattered Israel will gather, comfort, forgive, renew, and bind His people to Himself through a New Covenant written on the heart.

Chapter Summary

The Lord who scattered Israel will gather, comfort, forgive, renew, and bind His people to Himself through a New Covenant written on the heart.

Overview

Jeremiah 31 argues that the Lord's restoration must address the full depth of Israel's ruin: scattered people, broken joy, bereaved mothers, disciplined children, weary souls, broken covenant, guilty hearts, and ruined city. The Lord answers each need by His covenant love. He gathers the scattered, comforts the grieving, receives the repentant, satisfies the weary, rebuilds what was torn down, and makes a New Covenant that reaches the heart.

The deepest problem is not merely exile from land but covenant breach and sin. Therefore the deepest restoration is not merely return from Babylon but internalized law, universal knowledge of the Lord, and forgiveness in which sins are remembered no more.

Context
Author

Jeremiah son of Hilkiah, prophet to Judah before and during the Babylonian crisis.

Audience

Israel and Judah, including exiles, survivors of judgment, and future generations who would receive the written promise of restoration.

Setting

The chapter belongs to Jeremiah 30-33, the concentrated restoration section known as the Book of Consolation, given in the shadow of exile and national ruin.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from covenant restoration of all Israel, to joyful return, to Rachel's comfort and Ephraim's repentance, to Judah's restoration, to the New Covenant promise, and finally to the permanence of Israel and rebuilt Jerusalem.

Covenant Significance

Jeremiah 31 is one of Scripture's central covenant chapters. It moves from the restored covenant formula in verse 1 to the explicit New Covenant promise in verses 31-34. The New Covenant is necessary because the exodus covenant was broken. The Lord answers covenant failure not by lowering His law but by writing it on the heart, giving true knowledge of Himself, forgiving wickedness, and remembering sins no more.

Gospel Clarity

Jeremiah 31 clarifies the gospel by showing that the core human problem is not merely exile, sorrow, or broken circumstances but broken covenant and sin. The Lord does not merely promise to bring people back to land; He promises to forgive wickedness, remember sins no more, and write His law on the heart. The gospel announces that this New Covenant is established through the blood of Jesus Christ.

In Christ, sinners are forgiven, brought to know God, indwelt by the Spirit, and made part of the restored people of God.

Focus Points

  • Everlasting Love
  • Covenant Restoration
  • Gathering the Scattered
  • Joy After Mourning
  • Rachel's Comfort
  • Ephraim's Repentance
  • Fatherly Compassion
  • New Covenant
  • Forgiveness
  • Creation-Secured Faithfulness
  • Holy City
  • Covenant Love
  • Restoration
  • Repentance
  • Divine Compassion
  • Internalization of the Law
  • Knowledge of God
  • Persevering Covenant Faithfulness
  • Christ's Covenant Mediation
  • Lord's Supper Theology

Passages

Book Arc