
Text -- Joel 2:11 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Summon them in and encourage them as a general doth his soldiers.

Of locusts and insects, and of Chaldeans signified by these.
So among Mohammedans, "Lord of the locusts" is a title of God.

JFB: Joe 2:11 - -- His word of command to the locusts, and to the antitypical human foes of Judea, as "His army."
His word of command to the locusts, and to the antitypical human foes of Judea, as "His army."
Clarke -> Joe 2:11
Clarke: Joe 2:11 - -- The Lord shall utter his voice - Such a mighty force seems as if summoned by the Almighty, and the noise they make in coming announces their approac...
The Lord shall utter his voice - Such a mighty force seems as if summoned by the Almighty, and the noise they make in coming announces their approach, while yet afar off.
Calvin -> Joe 2:11
Calvin: Joe 2:11 - -- He at last adds, And Jehovah will utter his voice before his army. The Prophet seems in this verse to anticipate whatever objection men might adduc...
He at last adds, And Jehovah will utter his voice before his army. The Prophet seems in this verse to anticipate whatever objection men might adduce. “O! thou denounces on us great terrors, and as if the Assyrians were not to be counted as men, as if no other people were in the world, as if there was no other army, as if there were no other forces, as if none else had courage; but if the Assyrians are at this day formidable, they have yet neighbors who can gather a force sufficient easily to oppose them ” And Egypt was then a populous country, and well fortified; and who would not have said that the Egyptians were equal to the Assyrians? and the Jews also thought themselves safe through a treaty with them. And then there was Syria; and there were many kingdoms, with which the Jews might have boasted that they were surrounded, so that no access to them was open to the Assyrians; for however insufficient were the people of Moab or the people of Amman, yet they were all joined together, even Edom, and Ammon, and Moab: and then Tyrus and Sidon, and the many neighboring kingdoms, might certainly have been sufficient to resist the Assyrians. Now, that no one might object all this, the Prophet shortly anticipates it by saying, that God would be the leader of his army; as though he had said, “I have already declared this to be the hand of God: for the Assyrians will not come here of their own accord; that is, without being stirred up by God: but as this truth has not as yet sufficiently moved your feelings, know that God will be the leader of this army: God will send forth his voice before his army. ” Here he distinctly calls the Assyrians the attendants of God; they shall not then come as soldiers hired by their own king, they shall not come as carrying on war for an earthly king, but the Lord himself shall guide them, and by his voice encourage them. By this expression the Prophet shows that the Jews would not have a contest with one nation only, but also with God himself and with all his celestial power.
He therefore says, God will utter his voice before his army; for very great will be his camp. He again repeats that the multitude which was to execute the biddings of God would be so great, that the Jews would seek forces in vain to resist it. Strong, he says, is he who executes his word. He expresses more clearly what I have stated already, that though cupidity impelled the Assyrians, that though they were intent on rapine and plunder, yet they would not come merely through an impulse of their own, but that the Lord would prepare them and use them as his instruments: “ Powerful, then, is he who does the word of God; that is, who executes his command; not that the Assyrians designed to show regard to God or to offer to him their service, as the faithful do, who willingly devote themselves to Him; but that the Lord by his secret providence guided them and employed them to punish his own people.
He afterwards adds in the last place, For great will be the day of Jehovah and terrible, and who will endure it? In this clause he shows that the vengeance would be such as would reduce the Jews to nothing, and that it was now time to repent, and that if they still turned a deaf ear to what the Prophet denounces, God would punish their perverseness.
Now with regard to what he says, that strong is he who does the word of God, we have elsewhere reminded you that men serve God in two ways, — they either execute his commands willingly, or are led to do so by a blind impulse. The angels and the faithful perform God’s commands, because they are guided by the spirit of obedience; but the wicked also, and the devil who is their head, fulfill God’s biddings; this, however, is not to be imputed to them as obedience, for they are only led by their own wicked purposes, and seek to destroy, as far as they can, the whole government of God; but they are constrained, willing or unwilling, to obey God, not of their own accord or willingly, as I have said, but the Lord turns all their efforts to answer the end which he has decreed. Whatever, then, Satan and the wicked attempt to do, they at the same time serve God and obey his commands; and though they rage against God, he yet holds them in by his bridle, and also so guides their attempts and their purposes as to answer his own ends. In this sense, then, it is, that Joel says, that the Assyrians would do the word of God; not that it was their purpose to obey God, not that God had commanded them anything, but he puts the word of the Lord here for his secret purpose. As, then, the wicked perform no voluntary obedience to God, but constrained, when they execute God’s commands; so there is a twofold command or word of God: there is the command by which he teaches his own children and leads them to obey him; and there is another, a hidden command, when he deigns not to address men, and shows not what pleases him or what he means to do, but suffers them to be led by their own sinful desires; in the meantime, he has his own secret purpose, which by them he executes though without their intention.
Defender -> Joe 2:11
Defender: Joe 2:11 - -- The Lord's army is a different army than the one described in the previous verses. This is the army of saints accompanying Christ and His holy angels ...
The Lord's army is a different army than the one described in the previous verses. This is the army of saints accompanying Christ and His holy angels when He returns to earth to destroy the ungodly hosts of the Beast and the old Dragon (Rev 19:11-21)."
TSK -> Joe 2:11
TSK: Joe 2:11 - -- utter : Joe 3:16; 2Sa 22:14, 2Sa 22:15; Psa 46:6; Isa 7:18, Isa 13:4, Isa 42:13; Jer 25:30; Amo 1:2
his army : Joe 2:25
he is : Jer 50:34; Rev 18:8
th...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Joe 2:11
Barnes: Joe 2:11 - -- And the Lord shall utter His voice - The prophet had described at length the coming of God’ s judgments, as a mighty army. But lest amid t...
And the Lord shall utter His voice - The prophet had described at length the coming of God’ s judgments, as a mighty army. But lest amid the judgments, people should, (as they often do) forget the Judge, he represents God, as commanding this His army, gathering, ordering, marshalling, directing them, giving them the word, when and upon whom they should pour themselves. Their presence was a token of His. They should neither anticipate that command, nor linger. But as an army awaits the command to move, and then, the word being given, rolls on instantly, so God’ s judgments await the precise moment of His Will, and then fall. "The voice of the Lord"is elsewhere used for the thunder; because in it He seems to speak in majesty and terror to the guilty soul. But here the voice refers, not to us, but to the army, which He is imaged as marshalling; as Isaiah, referring perhaps to this place, says "The Lord of hosts mustereth the host of the battle"Isa 13:4.
God had spoken, and His people had not obeyed; now He speaks not to them anymore, but to their enemies. He calls the Medes and Persians, "My sanctified ones, My mighty ones"Isa 13:3, when they were to exercise His judgments on Babylon; and our Lord calls the Romans His armies. "He sent forth His armies and destroyed those murderers and burned up their city"Mat 22:7. Then follow as threefold ground of terror. "For His camp is very great."All the instruments wherewith God punishes sin, are pictured as His one camp, each going, as He commands, "Who bringeth forth the host of heaven by number: He calleth them all by names, by the greatness of His might, for that He is strong in power; not one faileth"Isa 40:26. For he is "strong, that executeth His word,"or, "for"it (His camp) is "strong, executing His word."Weak though His instruments be in themselves, they are mighty when they do His commands, for He empowers them, as Paul saith, "I can do all things through Christ instrengthening me"Phi 4:13. "For the Day of the Lord is great,"great, on account of the great things done in it. As those are called evil days, "an evil time,"in which evil comes; as it is called "an acceptable time;"in which we may be accepted; so the Day of God’ s judgment is "great and very terrible,"on account of the great and terrible acts of His justice done in it. who can abide it? The answer is implied in the question. "No one, unless God enable him."
This is the close of the threatened woe. The close, so much beyond any passing scourge of any created destroyer, locusts or armies, suggests the more what has been said already, that the prophet is speaking of the whole aggregate of God’ s judgments unto the Day of Judgment.
: "The Lord saith, that He will send an Angel with the sound of a trumpet, and the Apostle declares that the resurrection of the dead shall take place amid the sound of a trumpet. In the Revelation of John too, we read that the seven Angels received seven trumpets, and as they sounded in order, that was done which Scripture describes. The priests and teachers accordingly are here bidden to lift up their voice like a trumpet in Zion, that is, the Church, that so all the inhabitants of the earth may be troubled or confounded, and this confusion may draw them to Salvation. "By the Day of the Lord,"understand the Day of judgment, or the day when each departeth out of the body. For what will be to all in the Day of judgment, this is fulfilled in each in the day of death. It is a "day of darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds and of thick darkness,"because everything will be full of punishment and torment.
The great and strong people of the angels will come, to render to each according to his works; and as the rising morn first seizes the mountains, so judgment shall begin with the great and mighty, so that "mighty men shall be mightily tormented"(Wisd. 6:6). "There hath not been ever the like, neither shall be any more after it."For all evils, contained in ancient histories and which have happened to people, by inundation of the sea, or overflow of rivers, or by pestilence, disease, famines wild beasts, ravages of enemies, cannot be compared to the Day of judgment. "A fire devoureth, or consumeth before"this people, to consume in us "hay, wood, stubble."Whence it is said of God, "thy God is a consuming fire"Deu 4:24. And "after"him "a flame burneth,"so as to leave nothing unpunished. whomsoever this people toucheth not, nor findeth in him what is to be burned, shall be likened to the garden of God, and the paradise of pleasure, i. e., of Eden. If it burn any, it will reduce this (as it were) wilderness to dust and ashes, nor can any escape its fury.
For they shall run to and fro to torture those over whom they shall receive power, like horsemen flying hither and thither. Their sound shall be terrible, as "chariots"hurrying along level places, and upon the tops of the mountains they shall leap,"longing to torment all who are lofty and set on high in the Church. And since "before them there is a devouring fire,"they will destroy everything, "as the fire devoureth the stubble."They shall come to punish, "as a strong people in battle array."Such will be the fear, of all, such the conscience of sinners, that none shall shine or have any brightness of joy, but his face shall be turned into darkness. They shall not turn aside, in fulfilling the office enjoined them, but each shall carry on the punishments on sinners entrusted to him. At the presence of that people, "the earth shall quake and the heavens tremble. For heaven and earth shall pass away, but the word of the Lord shall endure forever."The sun and moon also shall not endure to see the punishments of the miserable, and shall remove and, for bright light, shall be shrouded in terrible darkness. "The stars also shall withdraw their shining,"in that the holy also shall not without fear behold the presence of the Lord. Amid all this, "The Lord shall utter His voice"before His army. For as the Babylonians, in punishing Jerusalem, are called the army of God, so the evil angels (of whom it is written, "He cast upon them the fierceness of His anger, wrath, and indignation, and trouble, by sending evil angels among them"Psa 78:49) are called the army of God and His camp, in that they do the Will of God."
The Day of the Lord, is great and terrible - Of which it is written, elsewhere, "to what end do ye desire the Day of the Lord? it is darkness and not light and very terrible"(from Amo 5:18), and few or none can abide it, but will furnish some ground of severity against himself.
Poole -> Joe 2:11
Poole: Joe 2:11 - -- The Lord Jehovah, the eternal and almighty God, Lord of hosts,
shall utter his voice summon them in, and encourage them, as a general doth encourag...
The Lord Jehovah, the eternal and almighty God, Lord of hosts,
shall utter his voice summon them in, and encourage them, as a general doth encourage his soldiers engaging in fight; God commands their attendance, and countenanceth their attempts.
Before his army of locusts and insects; and of Assyrians, Chaldeans, or Babylonians, signified by locusts.
His camp is very great very numerous and strong, and therefore described by the prophet in a manner almost above belief; it is the host which God gathers together, and by which he will do great things.
He is strong he giveth strength to his army, and is among them the Strong One; he doth by them execute his own purpose and threats, and so shows his strength.
That executeth his word what he hath declared and threatened to do.
The day of the Lord: see Joe 1:15 .
Is great wherein great sinners are punished, great judgments are executed, by great power in the instruments, and by greater power in the hand that useth them.
Very terrible full of terror, and such as will make the stoutest heart quail.
Who can abide it? neither king, nobles, nor warriors, but all faces gather blackness, as it is Joe 2:6,10 .
Haydock -> Joe 2:11
Gill -> Joe 2:11
Gill: Joe 2:11 - -- And the Lord shall utter his voice before his army,.... Either the army of the locusts, whom Pliny u calls "pestis deorum", "the plague of the gods"; ...
And the Lord shall utter his voice before his army,.... Either the army of the locusts, whom Pliny u calls "pestis deorum", "the plague of the gods"; and the Arabians frequently style them the army of God. It is a tradition of theirs that locusts fell into the hands of Mahomet, with this inscription on their backs and wings,
"we are the army of the most high God;''
and because they were, for that reason Mahomet made a law that none should kill them; See Gill on Rev 9:3. These creatures are certainly at his beck and command; he can "command the locust to devour the land", 2Ch 7:13; which may be meant by his uttering his voice here; though Jarchi and Kimchi interpret it of the Lord's giving notice of this judgment by his prophets before it fame: or this may design the army of the Assyrians or Chaldeans, of which the locusts were all emblem, and which were of the Lord's mustering together, and was at his command; and who is here represented as a General at the head of his army, making a speech to them to animate and encourage them to the battle, and to give them the word of command when to begin the onset:
for his camp is very great; or numerous, as both the locusts and Chaldeans were:
for he is strong that executeth his word; or "strong is it"; namely, the camp and army of the locusts; which, though feeble in themselves, separately considered; yet being in such large bodies, and the Lord at the head of them, and strengthened by him, were able to fulfil his word; which he can make the least and meanest of his creatures do: or the Assyrian or Chaldean army, which was both numerous and mighty: which the Targum may refer unto, paraphrasing the words,
"for strong are the executors of his word:''
for the day of the Lord is great and very terrible, and who can abide it? the day appointed by the Lord to take vengeance on the Jews for sin; and this, being the day of his wrath, is very dreadful and intolerable; so any season may be called, in which God remarkably pours down his wrath on men of their sins; see Rev 6:17. Such was the time of Jerusalem's destruction, both by the Chaldeans and Romans.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Joe 2:11 Heb “endure.” The MT and LXX read “endure,” while one of the Qumran manuscripts (4QXXIIc) has “bear.”
Geneva Bible -> Joe 2:11
Geneva Bible: Joe 2:11 And the LORD shall ( h ) utter his voice before his army: for his camp [is] very great: for [he is] strong that executeth his word: for the day of the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Joe 2:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Joe 2:1-32 - --1 He shews unto Zion the terribleness of God's judgment.12 He exhorts to repentance;15 prescribes a fast;18 promises a blessing thereon.21 He comforts...
MHCC -> Joe 2:1-14
MHCC: Joe 2:1-14 - --The priests were to alarm the people with the near approach of the Divine judgments. It is the work of ministers to warn of the fatal consequences of ...
Matthew Henry -> Joe 2:1-11
Matthew Henry: Joe 2:1-11 - -- Here we have God contending with his own professing people for their sins and executing upon them the judgment written in the law (Deu 28:42), The ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Joe 2:10-11
Keil-Delitzsch: Joe 2:10-11 - --
The whole universe trembles at this judgment of God. Joe 2:10. "Before it the earth quakes, the heavens tremble: sun and moon have turned black, an...
Constable: Joe 2:1-27 - --III. A near future day of the Lord: A human invasion 2:1-27
Joel had spoken briefly of a coming day of the Lord ...

Constable: Joe 2:1-11 - --A. The invading army 2:1-11
The Lord revealed that an army of human beings rather than locusts would soo...
