Jeremiah 6
The prophet describes an approaching siege from the north in harrowing detail, with enemies swarming against Jerusalem like harvest workers gathering grapes and soldiers preparing weaponry, while YHWH positions himself as the city's judge prepared to execute justice through military devastation. Jeremiah laments that the people refuse to hear the word of YHWH, rejecting the ancient paths of covenant faithfulness in pursuit of worthless rituals and religious hypocrisy that cannot substitute for genuine covenantal obedience and social justice. The chapter condemns superficial healing of Judah's breach ("Peace, peace" when there is no peace), establishing a critique of false prophets and religious leaders who offer comfort without confronting sin, contrasting sharply with Jeremiah's role as the watchman obligated to sound the alarm regardless of reception. The judgment here becomes inevitable not because YHWH desires destruction but because the people's systematic rejection of prophetic warning has exhausted divine patience and created the conditions for external military conquest to execute what internal covenant violation has rendered inevitable.