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Text -- Joel 1:1-15 (NET)

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Context
Introduction
1:1 This is the Lord’s message that was given to Joel the son of Pethuel:
A Locust Plague Foreshadows the Day of the Lord
1:2 Listen to this, you elders; pay attention, all inhabitants of the land. Has anything like this ever happened in your whole life or in the lifetime of your ancestors? 1:3 Tell your children about it, have your children tell their children, and their children the following generation. 1:4 What the gazam-locust left the ‘arbeh-locust consumed, what the ‘arbeh-locust left the yeleq-locust consumed, and what the yeleq-locust left the hasil-locust consumed! 1:5 Wake up, you drunkards, and weep! Wail, all you wine drinkers, because the sweet wine has been taken away from you. 1:6 For a nation has invaded our land. There are so many of them they are too numerous to count. Their teeth are like those of a lion; they tear apart their prey like a lioness. 1:7 They have destroyed our vines; they have turned our fig trees into mere splinters. They have completely stripped off the bark and thrown them aside; the twigs are stripped bare.
A Call to Lament
1:8 Wail like a young virgin clothed in sackcloth, lamenting the death of her husband-to-be. 1:9 No one brings grain offerings or drink offerings to the temple of the Lord anymore. So the priests, those who serve the Lord, are in mourning. 1:10 The crops of the fields have been destroyed. The ground is in mourning because the grain has perished. The fresh wine has dried up; the olive oil languishes. 1:11 Be distressed, farmers; wail, vinedressers, over the wheat and the barley. For the harvest of the field has perished. 1:12 The vine has dried up; the fig tree languishes– the pomegranate, date, and apple as well. In fact, all the trees of the field have dried up. Indeed, the joy of the people has dried up! 1:13 Get dressed and lament, you priests! Wail, you who minister at the altar! Come, spend the night in sackcloth, you servants of my God, because no one brings grain offerings or drink offerings to the temple of your God anymore. 1:14 Announce a holy fast; proclaim a sacred assembly. Gather the elders and all the inhabitants of the land to the temple of the Lord your God, and cry out to the Lord. 1:15 How awful that day will be! For the day of the Lord is near; it will come as destruction from the Divine Destroyer.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Joel a son of Pethuel and a prophet to Judah,son of Samuel of Kohath son of Levi,head of a large influential family of Simeon in King Hezekiah's time,a powerful leader among the descendants of Reuben,a chief of the tribe of Gad,son of Azariah (Uzziah) of Kohath; one of the Levites that King Hezekiah assigned to supervise the cleansing of the temple,son of Izrahiah of Issachar,brother of Nathan; one of David's military elite,a Levitical chief of the descendants of Ladan under King David,son of Ladan and temple treasurer under King David,son of Pedaiah; David's chief officer over the tribe of Manasseh,a man who put away his heathen wife; an Israelite descended from Nebo,a man who lived in Jerusalem in Nehemiah's time; son of Zichri,son of Pethuel; a prophet who wrote the book of Joel
 · Pethuel father of the prophet Joel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Joel | Nation | Afflictions and Adversities | Locust | Minister | JOEL (2) | Caterpillar | Pethuel | Palmer-worm | POMEGRANATE | PALESTINE, 1 | Famine | Apple | Drink-offering | Cankerworm | Agriculture | Wine | SACRIFICE, IN THE OLD TESTAMENT, 2 | Worship | Date | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Joe 1:1 The name Joel means in Hebrew “the Lord is God.” There are a dozen or so individuals with this name in the OT.

NET Notes: Joe 1:2 Heb “fathers.”

NET Notes: Joe 1:3 The circumstances that precipitated the book of Joel surrounded a locust invasion in Palestine that was of unprecedented proportions. The locusts had ...

NET Notes: Joe 1:4 Four different words for “locust” are used in this verse. Whether these words represent different life-stages of the locusts, or whether v...

NET Notes: Joe 1:5 Heb “your mouth.” This is a synecdoche of part (the mouth) for whole (the person).

NET Notes: Joe 1:6 Heb “its incisors are those of a lioness.” The sharp, cutting teeth are metonymical for the action of tearing apart and eating prey. The l...

NET Notes: Joe 1:7 Once choice leafy vegetation is no longer available to them, locusts have been known to consume the bark of small tree limbs, leaving them in an expos...

NET Notes: Joe 1:8 Heb “the husband of her youth.” The woman described here may already be married, so the reference is to the death of a husband rather than...

NET Notes: Joe 1:9 Heb “grain offering and drink offering are cut off from the house of the Lord,”

NET Notes: Joe 1:10 Joel uses intentionally alliterative language in the phrases שֻׁדַּד שָׂדֶ...

NET Notes: Joe 1:11 Heb “embarrassed”; or “be ashamed.”

NET Notes: Joe 1:12 Heb “the sons of man.”

NET Notes: Joe 1:13 Heb “for grain offering and drink offering are withheld from the house of your God.”

NET Notes: Joe 1:14 The conjunction “and” does not appear in MT or LXX, but does appear in some Qumran texts (4QXIIc and 4QXIIg).

NET Notes: Joe 1:15 There is a wordplay in Hebrew here with the word used for “destruction” (שׁוֹד, shod) and the term used for ...

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