The prophet Jeremiah knew that Israel’s great tribulation was coming and that nothing he said would stop it. Yet he did not stand at a distance with folded arms or quiet satisfaction. He wept. Again and again, his words are filled with grief: “Let my eyes flow with tears night and day” (Jeremiah 14:17). He mourned not only the consequences but the people themselves. In Jeremiah 4:8 he calls them to lament, to recognize the seriousness of what lies ahead. His tears were not weakness but evidence of a heart aligned with God’s own sorrow. Centuries later, Jesus would echo that same grief. Luke 19:41 tells us that when He saw Jerusalem, “he wept over it,” describing the destruction that would come because the people “did not know the time of your visitation.” Both Jeremiah and Jesus saw judgment approaching, and both responded not with anger alone, but with deep compassion.
That response challenges our instincts in subtle ways. It is easier, if we are honest, to shake our heads at the failures of others than to share in their sorrow. I admit that I have occasionally been tempted to feel a quiet sense of relief that I am not in someone else’s situation, which says more about me than I would prefer to admit. Yet Jeremiah’s tears and Jesus’ weeping remind us that the right response to brokenness is not distance but compassion. We live in a world where consequences unfold daily, sometimes loudly and sometimes quietly, and it can be tempting to analyze rather than empathize. Like spectators watching a storm from a safe distance, we may comment on the damage without feeling the weight of it. But Scripture presents a different posture, one that feels the loss even when the outcome is deserved, and that grieves because people matter more than being proven right.
The New Testament brings this truth into focus through Jesus, who does not merely predict judgment but carries sorrow for those who reject Him. His tears over Jerusalem reveal the heart of God, who “desires all people to be saved” (1 Timothy 2:4). Even in the face of rejection, His response is not cold detachment but grief. He also said, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem… how often would I have gathered your children together… and you were not willing” (Matthew 23:37). In Christ, we see that judgment and compassion are not opposites but intertwined realities. The same Savior who warns also weeps, showing that God’s justice is never separated from His love.
