This is Part 4 of a 9 part series - part 3 can be found at: Chapter 3 - Gilead and the Pattern of Covenant Judgment.
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Introduction
The book of Book of Joel is short, vivid, and often
overlooked. Yet its themes are among the most important in all the prophets.
Joel speaks of national crisis, covenant unfaithfulness, urgent repentance,
cosmic upheaval, divine judgment, and eventual restoration. At the center of
the book stands a repeated phrase: the
day of the LORD.
Many readers assume this language must refer only to the
final end of the world. But in the prophets, the “day of the LORD” regularly
describes decisive acts of divine intervention within history. God comes in
judgment against nations, rulers, and covenant breakers. That does not exclude
a final consummation, but it does mean the phrase often has historical
fulfillments before the end of all things.
When Joel is read alongside the teaching of Jesus in Gospel
of Matthew 24, an important possibility emerges. Joel’s warnings may speak
beyond his own generation and find a major covenantal fulfillment in the
destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. This was the moment when the temple fell,
the old covenant order reached its judicial end, and the words of Christ were
publicly vindicated.
Such a reading does not require us to say Joel was offering
a newspaper-style prediction of Rome by name. Rather, Joel gives covenant
patterns and prophetic imagery that later reach a dramatic climax in the first
century.
Joel uses the phrase “the day of the LORD” as a warning
siren. It is a day when God rises to confront sin, expose false security, and
bring judgment. In Joel’s own setting, that warning may have been tied to
plague, invasion, agricultural collapse, or some combination of these. But the
language stretches beyond one local disaster.
The prophets often speak this way. The fall of Babylon,
Egypt, Edom, Samaria, and Judah can each be described as a “day” of divine
judgment. God rules history, and when nations persist in rebellion, He visits
them.
That is why the phrase matters in the New Testament. Jesus
also warned Jerusalem of a coming day of reckoning. He lamented the city that
killed the prophets, pronounced the temple desolate, and foretold a tribulation
that would come upon that generation. The prophetic pattern had not
disappeared. It had reached its most serious form.
Joel is not
merely interested in predicting disaster. He calls the people to repentance:
“Return to me with all your heart.” (Joel 2:12)
The priests are summoned to weep. The elders are gathered.
The assembly is called. Trumpets are blown in Zion. This is covenant language.
Israel was not being judged as a random nation among nations. She was being
addressed as a people who had known God’s law, received His mercy, and broken
covenant obligations.
The same structure appears in the ministry of Jesus. He does
not warn Jerusalem as though she were ignorant of God. He warns her as a city
with a long history of resisting the prophets. In Matthew 23, He says the blood
of the righteous would come upon that generation. In Matthew 24, He announces
the temple’s destruction. In Luke 19, He says they did not know the time of
their visitation.
Joel and Jesus speak in the same covenant register:
privilege rejected brings judgment intensified.
Joel uses
dramatic imagery:
·
the earth quakes
·
the heavens tremble
·
the sun grows dark
·
the moon turns to blood
·
the stars withdraw their shining
Many modern readers assume such language must describe
literal astronomical collapse. Yet the Old Testament repeatedly uses cosmic
imagery for political overthrow, covenant crisis, and divine judgment in
history.
When Babylon falls in Isaiah 13, the stars are darkened.
When Egypt is judged in Ezekiel 32, the heavens are covered. When Edom falls in
Isaiah 34, the skies dissolve in prophetic language. This is not deception. It
is symbolic speech fitting events of world-shaking significance.
Jesus uses the same language in Matthew 24 when speaking of
Jerusalem’s fall. The point is not that the universe ended in AD 70, but that a
covenant world did. The temple-centered order that had defined Israel’s
national life came under irreversible judgment.
The New
Testament itself gives an important clue. In Acts 2, Peter quotes Joel and
declares,
“This is what was spoken by the prophet Joel.”
That statement matters. Peter does not place Joel entirely
in the distant future. He says Joel was already being fulfilled in the
outpouring of the Spirit. The last-days transition had begun. God was gathering
a renewed people.
If Joel’s restoration themes begin in the first century, it
is reasonable to ask whether Joel’s judgment themes also reach their covenant
climax there. The same generation that received the Spirit also witnessed the
fall of Jerusalem when many refused the Messiah.
This fits the repeated time statement of Jesus: “this
generation.”
One of the most debated features of Joel is the invading
army in chapter 2. Some interpret it as locusts only. Others see human armies
described in locust-like terms. It may be best to recognize that prophetic
imagery can merge the two. A plague becomes a pattern; a natural disaster
becomes a picture of military judgment.
Joel
describes an advancing force that is vast, disciplined, unstoppable, and
terrifying:
·
like war horses they run
·
like chariots they leap on mountain tops
·
they climb walls
·
they enter houses
·
they do not break ranks
·
the land behind them is desolate
This language fits invasion imagery remarkably well. It is
not difficult to see how later readers connected such themes to the Roman
assault on Judea and Jerusalem.
Contemporary accounts such as those of Flavius Josephus
describe famine, internal violence, fire, and devastation during the siege of
Jerusalem. These reports help modern readers appreciate why the language of
terror and desolation resonated so strongly with that generation.
The Roman legions were organized, relentless, and
devastating. They surrounded cities, breached walls, burned structures, and
left famine and ruin behind them. Ancient accounts of the Jewish War describe
horrors inside Jerusalem during the siege: starvation, civil conflict, fear,
and destruction. Joel’s language of terror and desolation therefore resonates
powerfully with the events of AD 70.
Again, this need not mean Joel consciously named Rome
centuries in advance. Rather, the Spirit gave patterns of covenant judgment
that later came into sharp historical focus.
Joel 2:1 “Blow
a trumpet in Zion… the day of the LORD is coming.”
Jesus likewise gives warning before judgment. In Matthew 24,
the disciples are told signs would precede Jerusalem’s fall. The trumpet in
Joel is an alarm; the discourse of Jesus functions the same way. AD 70 was not
without warning.
Joel 2:2 “A day
of darkness and gloom…”
Jesus speaks of unparalleled tribulation. The Jewish War
brought fear, famine, bloodshed, and national collapse. Darkness here reflects
catastrophe and covenant crisis.
Joel 2:3 “Before
them the land is like Eden, behind them a desolate wilderness.”
This is classic invasion imagery. Judea before war was
inhabited and functioning; after the Roman campaign many places were
devastated.
Joel 2:4 “Their appearance is like horses.”
Locusts were often compared to horses, but the image also
suits cavalry and military movement. Rome’s advancing forces made the metaphor
vivid.
Joel 2:5 “With
a noise like chariots…”
The sound of war dominates the scene. Joel’s imagery moves
naturally from plague language to battle language.
Joel 2:6 “Before
them peoples are in anguish.”
Fear spread throughout the region during the revolt and
siege. Jerusalem itself became a city of panic.
Joel 2:7–8 “They
run like mighty men… they do not break ranks.”
This strongly resembles disciplined troops. Roman military
order was one of the empire’s great strengths.
Joel 2:9 “They
leap upon the city… enter through the windows.”
Cities under siege were penetrated, plundered, and burned.
Joel’s picture corresponds to urban invasion.
Joel 2:10 “The
earth quakes… sun and moon are darkened.”
As in other prophets, this language signals world-shaking
judgment. In Matthew 24 Jesus uses similar cosmic imagery regarding Jerusalem’s
fall.
Joel 2:11 “The
LORD utters His voice before His army.”
Even foreign armies can be
instruments of divine judgment. Scripture often presents pagan powers as tools
in God’s hand, whether Assyria, Babylon, or Rome.
Joel 2:12–17 “Return to me with all your heart…”
Judgment is not the first desire of God. He calls for
repentance. Jesus likewise weeps over Jerusalem and longs to gather her
children.
Joel 2:18–27 Speaks to restoration after judgment.
After the old order falls,
God restores His people. In the New Testament this restoration centers in
Christ, the Spirit, and the global people of God.
Joel 2:28–32 “I
will pour out my Spirit…”
Peter applies this to Pentecost. The new covenant community
emerges in power just before the generation that would witness Jerusalem’s
fall.
1. Warning
Before Judgment. Neither Joel nor Jesus presents judgment as sudden without
witness. God warns first.
2.
Covenant Accountability. The people
judged are not ignorant outsiders only, but those entrusted with revelation.
3.
Apocalyptic Imagery. Both use cosmic
language to describe historical upheaval.
4.
Nearness Joel says the day is near. Jesus
says “this generation.”
5.
Deliverance for the Faithful. In Joel,
those who call on the Lord are saved. In Matthew 24, believers are told to flee
and endure.
One of the most important distinctions is this: AD 70 was
not the end of creation, but it was the end of a covenant age. The temple
system, sacrificial center, and old national structure tied to that order came
under judgment.
This helps explain why prophetic language can sound final
while referring to historical events. The fall of Jerusalem was not small. It marked the
public passing of an era and the vindication of Jesus as prophet, priest, and
king.
Joel does not end with ruin. He ends with hope. God restores
what was lost, pours out His Spirit, and dwells with His people.
The New Testament announces that this hope is fulfilled in a
greater way than many expected. The dwelling place of God is no longer centered
in a stone temple, but in Christ and His people. The mission now extends
to all nations.
Judgment therefore serves redemption. The removal of the old clears the
way for the revealed new.
The prophecy of Joel speaks first into the realities of his
own time, but it also reaches beyond them. Its themes of covenant warning,
urgent repentance, invading judgment, cosmic upheaval, and Spirit-led
restoration find a compelling fulfillment in the first century.
When read beside Matthew 24 and the events of AD 70, Joel
appears not as an isolated ancient voice, but as part of one unified biblical
witness. The prophets warned. Jesus confirmed. History answered.
The day of the Lord came upon Jerusalem—not as the final end
of all things, but as a decisive covenant judgment that changed the course of
redemptive history. And beyond that judgment stood the greater promise Joel
also proclaimed: all who call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
If Joel warns of judgment through invasion and upheaval,
Amos exposes the false confidence that often makes such judgment seem
impossible until it arrives.
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Watch for Chapter 5 - Amos, False Security, and the Pattern of Covenant Judgment, which will be posted soon. But first, check out this post relevant to the series: Reading the Weather Like Noah