Blow the trumpet in Zion; 
		sound the alarm on my holy hill. 
		Let all who live in the land tremble, 
		for the day of the LORD is coming. (Joel 2:1)
		Joel could be called the unknown prophet because 
		outside of his three chapter book and one reference in Acts 2:16 there's not much said about him anywhere. Not in the 
		Bible and not in the history books. 
		His father Pethuel (the name means vision of God) was unknown as 
		well.  In the absence of fact 
		scholars rush in with opinion but there's no consensus among them as to 
		when Joel wrote his book.  
		Some say it was in the 9th Century BC and others claim it was 
		300 years later, after the return from Babylon. 
		Interpreting Joel's book of prophecy doesn't depend upon knowing 
		the correct date of its publication so we won't get into that debate 
		except to say that what little evidence there is favors the early date, 
		around 850 BC.  The Book of 
		Joel must have carried a lot of weight right from the beginning, because 
		it appears from their writings that Amos, Micah, Zephaniah, Jeremiah, 
		and Ezekiel all borrowed phrases from it.   
		
		
		There is agreement that 
		Joel was speaking to what would become the Southern Kingdom, 
		seeing the massive locust plague and severe drought that were 
		devastating Judah at the time as a model of the Great Tribulation. 
		Therefore his message is one of repentance, comparing the locusts to 
		armies sent by the Lord to judge the nation for its sins. 
		Unlike some contemporary scholars who see the Day of the Lord as 
		being a time of judgment upon the Gentiles while bringing deliverance 
		for Israel, Joel knew that the unfaithful of Israel would be taken to 
		task as well.  Only following 
		their judgment would Israel be restored. 
		This is consistent with Jeremiah's later admonition that although 
		the nations will be completely destroyed during the Great Tribulation, 
		Israel will not go entirely unpunished but will be disciplined (Jere. 
		30:11).  And Zechariah 
		compared the Day of the Lord to a refiners fire, by which Israel's 
		impurities will be removed before the Kingdom age begins. (Zech. 13:9). 
		
		
		With that brief introduction, let' see what Joel 
		has to say to Israel at the End of the Age.
		
		
		
		                  
		Joel 1, An Invasion Of Locusts 
		The word of the LORD that came to Joel son of 
		Pethuel. Hear this, you elders; 
		listen, all who live in the land. 
		Has anything like this ever happened in your days 
		or in the days of your forefathers? Tell it to your children, 
		and let your children tell it to their children, 
		and their children to the next generation. (Joel 1:1-3)
		
		Joel's name means “The Lord is God” and he opened by 
		claiming that what we're about to read are the Lord's own words, flowing 
		through Joel's pen.  The Lord 
		commanded the first generation of readers to pass this along through 
		those who would follow.  
		
		What the locust swarm has left 
		the great locusts have eaten; 
		what the great locusts have left the young locusts have eaten; 
		what the young locusts have left 
		other locusts have eaten. (Joel 1:4)
		There are 24,000 varieties of locusts, some up to 10” 
		long, and they live for 6-7 years. 
		Some unexplained hormone change causes them to swarm 
		unexpectedly.  When that 
		happens they don't really fly but are carried on the wind, completely 
		divesting the place they land on of every trace of vegetation before 
		being carried off again. People who've experienced a locust plague claim 
		the swarms are so large and so dense they darken the sun, and at night 
		as you lie in bed you can actually hear them chewing outside your 
		window.  
		 
		While the exact meaning of the Hebrew here is unclear, 
		it appears to be describing four different 
		kinds of locusts, coming one after the other until there's 
		nothing left. 
		We're going to resist the temptation to allegorize 
		this plague as some commentators do, seeing the four kinds of locusts as 
		being representative of the four Gentile Kingdoms that eventually 
		brought about the disappearance of Israel. It's pretty clear that in the 
		beginning Joel was describing the devastation of an actual plague of 
		locusts.  But rest assured, 
		he'll be talking about the End of the Age soon enough. 
		
		
		                  
		The Drunks
		Wake up, you drunkards, and weep! 
		Wail, all you drinkers of wine; 
		wail because of the new wine, 
		for it has been snatched from your lips. A nation has invaded my 
		land,  powerful and without 
		number;  it has the teeth of 
		a lion,  the fangs of a 
		lioness.  It has laid waste 
		my vines  and ruined my fig 
		trees.  It has stripped off 
		their bark  and thrown it 
		away, leaving their branches white. 
		Mourn like a virgin in sackcloth grieving for the husband of her 
		youth. (Joel 1:5-8)
		The crops will be completely destroyed, and those who 
		habitually consume them will mourn like a bride-to-be grieving over the 
		loss of her betrothed, all the hopes and dreams of marriage snatched 
		away before even one of them comes true. This was considered to be one 
		of the most severe kinds of emotional loss, and the drinkers of wine 
		would experience that same feeling when they saw the crops destroyed 
		without warning before they got a single taste.
		
		
		                  
		The Priests
		Grain offerings and drink offerings are cut off 
		from the house of the LORD.  
		The priests are in mourning,  
		those who minister before the LORD. 
		The fields are ruined, the ground is dried up; the grain is 
		destroyed, the new wine is dried up, the oil fails. (Joel 1:9-10)
		The grain offering was a voluntary act of worship in 
		recognition of God's goodness and provision. 
		The drink offering accompanied the twice daily burnt offering 
		given for the general protection of the people. The locust plague made 
		these daily offerings impossible, preventing the people from expressing 
		their worship of the Lord. At opposite ends of the social spectrum, the 
		priests would mourn their inability to worship, just as the drunks 
		mourned their inability to imbibe. 
		
		
		
		                  
		The Farmers 
		
		Despair, you farmers, 
		wail, you vine growers; 
		grieve for the wheat and the barley, 
		because the harvest of the field is destroyed.
		The vine is dried up 
		and the fig tree is withered; the pomegranate, the palm and the 
		apple tree— all the trees of the field—are dried up. Surely the joy of 
		mankind is withered away. (Joel 1:11-12)
		Farmers were the most directly affected, the fruit of 
		their labor destroyed before it could replenish their depleted stores or 
		be exchanged for compensation. A whole year's work for naught. 
		Some would not even have sufficient grain for seed, making the next 
		harvest unlikely as well. 
		These three groups are meant to be representative of 
		the entire community, from the lowest to the highest and everyone in 
		between. No one would emerge from this unscathed. 
		
		
		                  
		A Call to Repentance 
		Put on sackcloth, O 
		priests, and mourn;  wail, 
		you who minister before the altar. 
		Come, spend the night in sackcloth, 
		you who minister before my God; 
		for the grain offerings and drink offerings are withheld from the 
		house of your God. 
		Declare a holy fast; 
		call a sacred assembly. 
		Summon the elders  and 
		all who live in the land  to 
		the house of the LORD your God, 
		and cry out to the LORD. 
		 Alas for that day! 
		For the day of the LORD is near; 
		it will come like destruction from the Almighty. (Joel 
		1:13-15)
		The transition has been made. 
		Having begun by describing a plague of locusts Joel now sees the 
		coming Day of the Lord, and calls everyone to fast and pray. 
		Has not the food been cut off before our very eyes— 
		joy and gladness from the house of our God? 
		 The seeds are shriveled beneath 
		the clods.  The storehouses 
		are in ruins, the granaries have been broken down, 
		for the grain has dried up. How the 
		cattle moan! The herds mill about because they have no pasture; 
		even the flocks of sheep are suffering. 
		 To you, O LORD, I call, 
		for fire has devoured the open pastures 
		and flames have burned up all the trees of the field. 
		Even the wild animals pant for you; 
		the streams of water have dried up 
		and fire has devoured the open pastures. (Joel 1:16-20)
		At the outset of Daniel's 70th week the anti-Christ 
		will make his initial appearance 
		as the rider on a white horse (Rev. 6:2). 
		He'll come to power in the guise of a peacemaker (Daniel 8:28) 
		following the Battle of Ezekiel 38-39, and 
		will fool everyone. But it's a big lie and while people are 
		saying “Peace and safety” destruction will come upon them suddenly and 
		they will not escape. (1 Thes. 5:3) 
		With the arrival of the rider on the red horse peace will be 
		taken from the Earth and war will suddenly break out again. 
		(Rev. 6:4) 
		
		This will bring a time of famine in the midst of 
		plenty. There'll be shortages almost everywhere. 
		As if that isn't bad enough, runaway inflation will price even 
		those foods that can be found out of the reach of many. It'll take an 
		average day's wages just to feed one person. (Rev. 6:6) 
		Those who can't support themselves will be left to starve with no 
		one able to help them.  Then, 
		as the Trumpet Judgments begin, one third of of the trees and all the 
		green grass will go up in smoke (Rev. 7:7) destroying the 
		animals' pastureland.
		
		War also renders public health services 
		ineffective.  Sanitation 
		facilities stop working. Power and water longer flow. 
		Hospitals can't handle the burden so disease runs rampant, 
		causing even more death.   
		The Great Tribulation is still ahead and yet in 1/4th 
		 of the world, millions of people 
		will have already died from the wars, famine, and 
		plagues.  Even the 
		wild animals will be going crazy from lack of food and water, brazenly 
		attacking humans for sustenance. (Rev. 6:8). 
		This is no longer a mere plague of locusts that happened 29 
		centuries ago.  This is the 
		run up to the Day of the Lord, and we're the generation for whom Joel's 
		warning is intended.  Stay 
		tuned, there's plenty more ahead. 
		12-05-09