Joel: JUDGMENT (I)

Do you believe this invasion is literally locusts, represents an army, or is both? Why do you believe as you do?

“The Day Of The Lord Is Near” (1:1-20)

Neal Pollard

No other book of the Bible is more wholly devoted to the subject of the day of the Lord than Joel. While the book’s most prominent appearance in the New Testament is not in the context of the final Judgment Day and is rather concerning the day in which the gospel is first preached, the book of Joel is written to its primary recipients about coming, divine judgment. Apparently, there is a locust plague which the prophet asserts as both the judgment of God and a sign of judgment to come. 

It is hard to date the book because there just aren’t any clear contextual clues to alert us to whether this is pre-exilic or post-exilic, if the northern kingdom has already suffered Assyrian Captivity, or the like. Those historic markers have no bearing on the message or interpretation of this short book. It is the theme that is central. The book centers around three ideas–judgment (1:1-2:11), repentance (2:12-17), and salvation (2:18-3:21; salvation for God’s people meant judgment for the nations around them). Chapter one focuses on the judgment which faces God’s people.

This judgment is unprecedented (1:1-4).Out of the starting gate, the prophet describes an event unlike any they or their forefathers had experienced (2). It would be one they would talk about for generations to come (3). The crux of this judgment, coming through natural disaster, is described graphically: “What the gnawing locust has left, the swarming locust has eaten; And what the swarming locust has left, the creeping locust has eaten; And what the creeping locust has left, the stripping locust has eaten” (4). 

These first few verses are considered Hebrew poetry, with verses three and four composed of three lines each. Duane Garrett asserts, “The heavy rhythm conveys a sense of being battered by successive waves of locusts, each one as bad as or worse than the previous” (NAC, 315). Joel likely is describing different stages of the locust and the final destruction brought by locusts hatched from eggs left by the earlier devourers. The point is that God brought this judgment and that it is unlike anything they had experienced. He will soon show that it is a response to the nation’s sin. 

This judgment is understandable (1:5). That there is a moral problem is demonstrated by the prophet’s address to the drunkards, apt symbols of national immorality as their vice depends on the successful growth of grapevines which the locusts would destroy. These creatures are being used to cut them off from their debauchery. They do not seem to be sorry for their sin, only that they are prevented from indulging in it. The farmers are the most directly impacted, but everyone in the land will suffer in the wake of this judgment. A call for repentance in the latter part of the chapter removes any doubt that this is merely a natural disaster. 

This judgment is unbearable (1:6-12) and upsetting (1:13-20). That fact is borne out by the description of invasion by this horde depicted as a nation described in frightening terms (6). It leaves nothing behind (7), but notice the reaction called for. “Wail like a virgin” (8), “be ashamed…wail” (11), “gird yourselves with sackcloth and lament” (13), “fast…and cry out to the Lord” (14,19). This judgment will effect man and beast (18,20). The judgment will be so comprehensive that the people will buckle under its weight and extensive impact. The impulse will be to plead, “To You, O Lord, I cry” (19). 

Something horrible is about to happen, and it is the result of judgment. It is Divine Judgment, coming with the omnipotence of God! Gone is “gladness and joy from the house of our God” (16). From the first word of the prophesy, Joel startles the reader with relentless descriptions of judgment. James Smith comments, “The prophet interpreted this disaster as an effort to move Israel to repentance. At the same time this plague was a harbinger of a worse judgment to come” (OT Survey Series, 61).  What the final day of judgment will be like will depend on whether or not we have made ready for it and what that judgment, for us, will be (Mat. 25:31-46). It can be a “bright day” or a “sad day.” If it is the latter, there will have been nothing before it in history to compare to the devastation of standing before the Lord unprepared for it. 

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Author: preacherpollard

preacher,Cumberland Trace church of Christ, Bowling Green, Kentucky

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