
Text -- Joel 1:17 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Joe 1:17
Wesley: Joe 1:17 - -- Run to ruin because the owners discouraged with the barrenness of the seasons, would not repair them.
Run to ruin because the owners discouraged with the barrenness of the seasons, would not repair them.
JFB: Joe 1:17 - -- "is dried up," "vanishes away," from an Arabic root [MAURER]. "Seed," literally, "grains." The drought causes the seeds to lose all their vitality and...
"is dried up," "vanishes away," from an Arabic root [MAURER]. "Seed," literally, "grains." The drought causes the seeds to lose all their vitality and moisture.

JFB: Joe 1:17 - -- Granaries; generally underground, and divided into separate receptacles for the different kinds of grain.
Granaries; generally underground, and divided into separate receptacles for the different kinds of grain.
Clarke -> Joe 1:17
Clarke: Joe 1:17 - -- The seed is rotten under their clods - When the sprout was cut off as low as possible by the locusts, there was no farther germination. The seed rot...
The seed is rotten under their clods - When the sprout was cut off as low as possible by the locusts, there was no farther germination. The seed rotted away.
Calvin -> Joe 1:17
Calvin: Joe 1:17 - -- He shows the cause of the evil, Rotted have the grains in the very furrows. For they call seeds פרדות peredut from the act of scattering. ...
He shows the cause of the evil, Rotted have the grains in the very furrows. For they call seeds
TSK -> Joe 1:17

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Joe 1:17
Barnes: Joe 1:17 - -- The seed is rotten under the clods - Not only was all to be cut off for the present, but, with it, all hope for the future. The scattered seed,...
The seed is rotten under the clods - Not only was all to be cut off for the present, but, with it, all hope for the future. The scattered seed, as it lay, each under its clod known to God, was dried up, and so decayed. The garners lay desolate, nay, were allowed to go to ruin, in hopelessness of any future harvest.
Poole -> Joe 1:17
Poole: Joe 1:17 - -- The seed called so from the seedsman’ s scattering it abroad when he soweth it, and in this place only so used, for aught I can observe, and yet...
The seed called so from the seedsman’ s scattering it abroad when he soweth it, and in this place only so used, for aught I can observe, and yet this use of it here is justified by all the following words; the grain which is sown for the seed against next spring.
Is rotten is putrefied, grown musty and fruitless; nor is this word any where else used in Scripture. Under their clods, and earth, from under which the seed covered should spring up, but now, as unsound, rotten, and fruitless seed, is lost under it.
The garners or storehouses, treasuries of corn, in which it was kept for future use,
are laid desolate either run to ruin, because the owners, discouraged with the barrenness of the seasons, would not repair them; this will intimate that this judgment lasted some years, and is better ground for it than the four sorts of vermin repeated one after another, in Joe 1:4 : or else desolate, being pulled down, and the materials employed for other uses, till they may have corn to keep in them.
The barns in which they lodged their unthrashed corn,
are broken down neglected, and without repair;
for the corn is withered there was no use of them, no corn to be laid up, all withered, and therefore the barns were not regarded.
Haydock -> Joe 1:17
Haydock: Joe 1:17 - -- Dung. Horse-dung dried for bedding, was used in the East instead of straw, (Busb. 3.) as it is still by the Arabs. (Darvieux 11.) ---
Hebrew, "the...
Dung. Horse-dung dried for bedding, was used in the East instead of straw, (Busb. 3.) as it is still by the Arabs. (Darvieux 11.) ---
Hebrew, "the seeds are rotten under their clods," (Haydock) finding no moisture. Septuagint, "the cows have stamped in their stalls;" or Syriac, "remain without food in their cribs." Chaldean, "the pitchers of wine have been corrupted under their covers," as there was no new wine. (Calmet) ---
Houses. Hebrew mammeguroth. Protestants, "barns, (Haydock) or country houses;" which means cabins erected for the season, (Ruth ii. 7.) the Magaria (Calmet) or Mopalia of the Africans. (St. Jerome pref. Amos.) ---
Septuagint, "the wine presses." Wine and corn were preserved in pits carefully covered over, Aggeus ii. 20. These fell to decay, as there was no use for them.
Gill -> Joe 1:17
Gill: Joe 1:17 - -- The seed is rotten under their clods,.... Or "grains" z of wheat or barley, which had been sown, and, for want of rain, putrefied and wasted away unde...
The seed is rotten under their clods,.... Or "grains" z of wheat or barley, which had been sown, and, for want of rain, putrefied and wasted away under the clods of earth, through the great drought; so that what with locusts, which cropped that that did bud forth, and with the drought, by reason of which much of the seed sown came to nothing, an extreme famine ensued: the Targum is,
"casks of wine rotted under their coverings:''
the garners are desolate; the "treasuries" a, or storehouses, having nothing in them, and there being nothing to put into them; Jarchi makes these to be peculiar for wine and oil, both which failed, Joe 1:10;
the barns are broken down; in which the wheat and barley had used to be laid up; but this judgment of the locusts and drought continuing year after year, the walls fell down, and, no care was taken to repair them, there being no, use for them; these were the granaries, and, as Jarchi, for wheat particularly:
for the corn is withered; that which sprung up withered and dried away, through the heat and drought: or was "ashamed" b; not answering the expectation of the sower.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Joe 1:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Joe 1:1-20 - --1 Joel, declaring sundry judgments of God, exhorts to observe them,8 and to mourn.14 He prescribes a solemn fast to deprecate those judgments.
MHCC -> Joe 1:14-20
MHCC: Joe 1:14-20 - --The sorrow of the people is turned into repentance and humiliation before God. With all the marks of sorrow and shame, sin must be confessed and bewai...
Matthew Henry -> Joe 1:14-20
Matthew Henry: Joe 1:14-20 - -- We have observed abundance of tears shed for the destruction of the fruits of the earth by the locusts; now here we have those tears turned into the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Joe 1:16-20
Keil-Delitzsch: Joe 1:16-20 - --
"Is not the food destroyed before our eyes, joy and exulting from the house of our God? Joe 1:17. The grains have mouldered under their clods, the...
Constable -> Joe 1:2-20; Joe 1:15-20
Constable: Joe 1:2-20 - --II. A past day of the Lord: a locust invasion 1:2-20
The rest of chapter 1 describes the effects of a severe loc...
