Fountain in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
            foun'-tin, foun'-tan: In a country where no rain falls for 
half of the year, springs sume an importance unknown in more 
favored lands. In both eastern and western Israel and even 
in Lebanon there are many villages which depend entirely 
upon reservoirs or cisterns of rain water. Others are 
situated along the courses of the few perennial streams. But 
wherever a spring exists it is very apt to be the nucleus of 
a village. It may furnish sufficient water to be used in 
irrigation, in which case the gardens surrounding the 
village become an oasis in the midst of the parched land. Or 
there may be a tiny stream which barely suffices for 
drinking water, about which the village women and girls sit 
and talk waiting their turns to fill their jars, sometimes 
until far in the night. The water of the village fountain is 
often conveyed by a covered conduit for some distance from 
the source to a convenient spot in the village where an arch 
is built up, under which the water gushes out. See CISTERN; 
SPRING; WELL; EN-, and place-names compounded with EN-.
Figurative: (1) of God (Ps 36:9; Jer 2:13; 17:13); (2) of 
Divine pardon and purification, with an obvious Messianic 
reference (Zec 13:1); (3) of wisdom and godliness (Prov 
13:14; 14:27); (4) of wives (Prov 5:18); (5) of children (Dt 
33:28; compare Ps 68:26; Prov 5:16); (6) of prosperity (Ps 
107:35; 114:8; Hos 13:15); (7) of the heart (Eccl 12:6; see 
CISTERN); (8) of life everlasting (Rev 7:17; 21:6).
                          
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