Saturday, May 23, 2026

Chapter 4 - Joel, the Day of the Lord, and the Judgment of Jerusalem

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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Reading Joel Through the Lens of Matthew 24 and AD 70

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.

The Main Theme of Joel: The Day of the LORD

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.

Covenant Warning and the Call to Repentance

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.

Cosmic Language and Prophetic Imagery

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.

Joel in Acts 2: A First-Century Fulfillment Already Begun

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.”

Roman Invasion Imagery in Joel

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.

A Verse-by-Verse Comparison: Joel 2, Matthew 24, and AD 70

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 2:6Before 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.

Joel and Matthew 24: Shared Themes

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.

Not the End of the World, but the End of a World

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.

Restoration Beyond Judgment

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.

Conclusion

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 Judgmentwhich will be posted soon.

 

 

 

Monday, May 18, 2026

Chapter 3 - Gilead and the Pattern of Covenant Judgment

This is Part 3 of a 9 part series - part 2 can be found at: The Twelve Prophets, Covenant Judgment, and the Question of Fulfillment
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Chapter 3 - Gilead and the Pattern of Covenant Judgment

When reading the book of Book of Hosea, one encounters repeated references to places that seem, at first glance, to be simple geographical markers. One such place is Gilead. Yet a closer reading shows that these references carry a deeper prophetic weight. This raises an important question: are these descriptions limited to Hosea’s own time, or do they reveal a broader pattern of covenant judgment that appears elsewhere in Scripture?

To answer that, we must first understand the role Gilead plays in Hosea’s message.

Gilead in Its Immediate Context

Hosea prophesied during the eighth century BC, primarily to the northern kingdom of Israel. This was a time marked by political instability, idolatry, and deep moral corruption. Although Israel continued outward religious practices, its covenant relationship with God had been hollowed out.

In Hosea 6:8 we read:

“Gilead is a city of evildoers, tracked with blood.”

Gilead, located east of the Jordan River, was historically associated with refuge and healing. Yet here it is described as a place marked by violence and bloodshed. The problem is not merely social disorder—it is covenant failure.

This becomes even clearer in Hosea 6:9:

“As robbers lie in wait for a man, so the priests band together; they murder on the way to Shechem; they commit crimes.”

The corruption has reached into the priesthood itself. Those who were meant to uphold the covenant and guide the people have instead become participants in violence and injustice. Gilead, in this context, is more than a location—it is a symbol of what Israel has become.

More Than Geography: A Covenant Symbol

Throughout the prophets, place names often carry symbolic meaning. Cities and regions can come to represent spiritual conditions, covenant status, and moral realities.

In Hosea, Gilead functions this way. It represents:

·         Violence and bloodshed

·         Religious corruption

·         Priestly failure 

·         Covenant unfaithfulness

In other words, Gilead is not just a place on a map—it is a picture of a people who have broken covenant with God while continuing to act as though nothing is wrong.

This is a recurring prophetic theme. The issue is not simply sin in a general sense, but covenant violation—the breaking of a relationship that had been clearly defined and established.

A Generational Collapse and a Warning to Judah

What makes Hosea’s message even more striking is that the corruption he describes is not merely momentary, but generational. In Hosea 4, the failure of the priests leads to a wider collapse among the people, and ultimately affects their children. “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge… since you have rejected knowledge… I will also reject your children.” The problem is no longer isolated—it has become systemic, passed down and normalized over time. As Hosea states, “like people, like priest,” showing that both leadership and society alike have been shaped by the same pattern of unfaithfulness.

At the same time, Hosea does not limit his warning to the northern kingdom. He explicitly cautions Judah not to follow the same path: “Though you, Israel, play the whore, let not Judah become guilty” (Hos 4:15). Yet even as the warning is given, the pattern is already spreading. Later passages indicate that Judah, too, begins to stumble under the same weight of covenant failure. What begins in Israel does not remain there. The same conditions—corrupt leadership, empty religion, and moral decay—move outward and take root beyond their point of origin.

A Pattern of Covenant Judgment

What we see in Hosea is not an isolated event, but part of a larger biblical pattern.

- First, God establishes a covenant with His people.
- Then, the people drift into unfaithfulness—often marked by idolatry,             injustice, and corruption.
- Warnings are given through the prophets.
- When those warnings are ignored, judgment follows.

Gilead represents one stage in this process—a visible manifestation of a deeper, long-developing failure. It is the fruit of generational decline, not merely a sudden collapse.

But the question remains: does this pattern appear again?

From Gilead to Jerusalem

While Hosea’s immediate focus falls upon the northern kingdom, we have already noted that in chapter 4 the warning extends to Judah as well. Nor does the pattern end there. The same covenant conditions later emerge in Jerusalem, particularly in the first century, where corruption, hypocrisy, and coming judgment again stand at the forefront.

In Matthew 23, Jesus speaks directly to the religious leaders of His day:

“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! … you are full of hypocrisy and wickedness.”

He goes on to accuse them of being responsible for the blood of the prophets:

“And so upon you will come all the righteous blood that has been shed on earth…” 

The parallels are difficult to ignore. Just as in Hosea’s day:

·   Religious leaders are corrupt

·   Violence and bloodshed are present

·   Covenant faithfulness has been replaced with outward appearance

Jerusalem, like Gilead before it, becomes a symbol of covenant failure—but now at a climactic point. What began in Israel, and spread toward Judah, has reached its full expression in the very city meant to represent God’s dwelling among His people.

This culminates in Jesus’ warning of coming judgment, which unfolds in the events leading up to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. In this sense, the pattern seen in Hosea finds a later and more complete expression.

Not Prediction, but Pattern

It is important to be clear at this point. Hosea is not directly predicting first-century Jerusalem when he speaks of Gilead. His message is rooted in his own historical setting. Yet that message belongs to a larger and recurring biblical pattern: covenant faithfulness followed by apostasy, judgment, repentance, and restoration. What is revealed in Hosea does not end with Hosea’s generation.

Gilead is an early example of what happens when:

·         covenant is broken

·         leadership becomes corrupt

·         violence replaces justice

·         outward religion masks inward decay

These same conditions appear again in later generations. The issue, then, is not confined to one place or one moment in history, but to the repeated tendency of God’s people to drift from covenant faithfulness.

Why This Matters

Understanding this pattern helps guard against a common misunderstanding—namely, the tendency to read prophetic language in strictly geographical or political terms.

When Scripture speaks of places like Gilead, Samaria, Jerusalem, or Babylon, it is often doing more than describing location. It is revealing covenant condition.

This has important implications. It means that:

·      Judgment is not tied simply to land, but to covenant faithfulness

·      Being associated with a place does not guarantee blessing

·      Covenant failure can develop slowly and spread across generations

·      The same failures can—and do—repeat across time

In this light, the prophetic message is not merely about past events or future speculation. It is a call to recognize the condition of the covenant relationship itself.

Yet Hosea does not end in ruin. Alongside warnings of judgment come promises of healing, renewal, and restored relationship. This reminds us that covenant judgment is never merely destructive. Its deeper purpose is to confront unfaithfulness so that restoration may follow.

Conclusion

Gilead, as presented in Hosea, is more than a city—it is a warning. It represents what happens when a people entrusted with covenant responsibility abandon that calling.

What begins as localized corruption becomes generational decline. What appears in one region spreads to another. What is first seen in Israel extends toward Judah and ultimately reaches Jerusalem in a later generation.

While Hosea speaks to his own time, the pattern he reveals continues throughout Scripture. It is a pattern of covenant failure, prophetic warning, and eventual judgment. Yet even within that pattern, there remains the broader hope found throughout the biblical story: that God’s purpose is not only to confront unfaithfulness, but to restore what has been lost.

Recognizing this pattern allows us to read the prophets more clearly—not as isolated voices tied to distant events, but as witnesses to an ongoing reality in the relationship between God and His people.

If Hosea shows how covenant failure spreads, Joel shows how covenant judgment arrives. The language of the Day of the Lord now takes center stage.
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Watch for Chapter 4 - Joel, the Day of the Lord, and the Judgment of Jerusalemwhich will be posted soon.

 

 

 

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Twelve Prophets, Covenant Judgment, and the Question of Fulfillment

This is Part 2 of a 9 part series - part 1 can be found at: 
The Minor Prophets and the Fall of Jerusalem

Chapter 2 - The Twelve Prophets, Covenant Judgment, and the Question of Fulfillment

When modern readers approach the Minor Prophets, they often do so with a sense of confusion or distance. The twelve short prophetic books near the end of the Old Testament can appear fragmented, obscure, and difficult to connect to the larger biblical story. Some readers view them primarily as collections of future predictions about the end of the world, while others treat them as ancient religious writings with little relevance beyond their own historical period. Yet neither approach fully captures the role these prophets play within Scripture.

The Minor Prophets were not isolated voices speaking random warnings into the void. They were covenant messengers. Though separated by time, geography, and circumstance, they spoke with remarkable unity concerning the condition of Israel and Judah, the corruption of worship, the failure of leadership, the oppression of the weak, and the certainty of divine judgment when covenant unfaithfulness reached its fullness. Again and again, these prophets warned that religious ceremony without faithfulness would not preserve the nation from judgment. Temple rituals, sacrifices, national identity, and outward forms of worship could not protect a people who had abandoned justice, mercy, humility, and obedience to God.

This pattern lies at the heart of the prophetic message.

The prophets addressed real historical situations. Hosea and Amos warned the northern kingdom before the Assyrian invasion. Micah and Isaiah warned Judah before the Babylonian catastrophe. Zephaniah and Habakkuk spoke during periods of deep moral and political decline. Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi addressed the spiritual failures that emerged even after the return from exile. Together, the Twelve span several centuries of Israel’s covenant history, stretching from the final decades of the divided kingdom to the years following the rebuilding of the temple.

Yet despite these differing historical settings, the prophets repeatedly return to the same themes. Israel has broken covenant. Leaders have become corrupt. Worship has become polluted. The people trust in external religion while ignoring the weightier matters of righteousness and justice. Because of this, judgment is coming.

The language used to describe these judgments is often dramatic and symbolic. The prophets speak of the heavens shaking, the sun being darkened, the earth trembling, cities becoming desolate, and nations collapsing beneath divine wrath. Unfortunately, modern readers frequently assume such language must refer exclusively to the end of the world. Yet within the Old Testament itself, this kind of imagery regularly appears in connection with historical judgments upon nations and kingdoms.

When Isaiah described the fall of Babylon, he spoke of the stars and constellations withholding their light and the heavens trembling. When Ezekiel described the judgment of Egypt, he used similar cosmic imagery. The prophets were not attempting to give scientific descriptions of astronomical collapse. Rather, they were using established prophetic language to describe the downfall of political powers, covenant systems, and nations standing under divine judgment.

This becomes especially important when reading passages concerning the “Day of the Lord.”

In popular prophecy systems, the Day of the Lord is often treated almost entirely as a future end-times event still awaiting fulfillment. Yet within the prophets themselves, the Day of the Lord repeatedly refers to historical acts of judgment occurring within history. Sometimes the judgment falls upon pagan nations. At other times it falls upon Israel and Judah themselves. Joel describes invading destruction through the imagery of a locust plague and military invasion. Amos warns complacent Israelites who wrongly assume the Day of the Lord will favour them rather than expose their corruption. Zephaniah describes it as a day of darkness, distress, and devastation upon Jerusalem because of covenant rebellion.

This does not mean the prophetic message lacks future dimensions. The prophets frequently move between near and far horizons, historical judgments and larger redemptive themes. Judgment and restoration are often woven together. Yet the future hope presented by the prophets consistently emerges through the collapse of corrupt covenant structures rather than through their permanent preservation.

This distinction becomes critical in understanding how the New Testament reads the prophets.

The apostles repeatedly apply prophetic promises and warnings directly to Christ, the Church, and the events surrounding the first century. Peter applies Joel’s prophecy concerning the outpouring of the Spirit to Pentecost. James applies Amos’s prophecy concerning the rebuilding of David’s fallen tent to the inclusion of Gentiles into the people of God. Matthew applies Hosea’s words, “Out of Egypt I called my son,” to Christ Himself. John the Baptist is identified as the messenger anticipated in Malachi. Again and again, the New Testament writers interpret the prophets through the lens of Christ’s kingdom and the arrival of the New Covenant.

This interpretive pattern creates tension with many modern prophetic systems.

In various forms of Dispensationalism, many prophetic passages are projected almost entirely into the future. The prophets are often read primarily as descriptions of events surrounding a future tribulation period, a restored national Israel, a rebuilt temple, renewed sacrifices, or a future geopolitical kingdom centered in earthly Jerusalem. While Dispensationalism differs internally in important ways, especially between classical and progressive forms, the overall tendency is to relocate much of prophetic fulfillment away from the first-century context emphasized by Jesus and the apostles.

This shift profoundly affects how the prophets are read.

For example, many passages warning of covenant judgment upon Israel are moved forward into a future seven-year tribulation. Restoration passages are interpreted almost exclusively in national and geopolitical terms. Temple imagery is often understood as requiring a future rebuilt temple and renewed sacrificial system. Yet the New Testament repeatedly presents Christ as the fulfillment and transformation of these covenant realities. Christ becomes the true temple. His sacrifice fulfills the sacrificial system. Jew and Gentile are united into one people of God. The kingdom is presented not as postponed, but inaugurated through the death, resurrection, ascension, and enthronement of Christ.1

This difference in interpretation is not merely a disagreement about isolated prophetic verses. It reflects two fundamentally different approaches to fulfillment itself.

One approach tends to preserve Old Covenant structures in future form. The other sees those structures fulfilled, transformed, and brought to completion in Christ and the New Covenant.

This study proceeds from the latter understanding.

The argument presented in these chapters is not that every Minor Prophet directly predicted the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 in a simplistic one-to-one manner. Nor is the claim that the prophets were unaware of their own historical setting. Rather, the prophets established covenant patterns that continued throughout Israel’s history and ultimately reached their climax in the judgment upon Jerusalem spoken of by Jesus.

Again and again, the prophets warned that covenant privilege without covenant faithfulness would result in judgment. They condemned corrupt leadership, false security, exploitation of the weak, religious hypocrisy, and trust in outward symbols detached from obedience to God. Jerusalem eventually came to embody the very conditions earlier prophets had condemned.

Jesus Himself consciously drew upon this prophetic tradition. His warnings against the religious leadership of His day echo the language and themes of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, Micah, and Malachi. His lament over Jerusalem stands in continuity with centuries of covenant warnings. In Matthew 23, He declares that the blood of the prophets would come upon that generation. In Matthew 24, He announces the coming desolation of the temple. The destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 did not emerge suddenly or without precedent. It stood within an already established covenant pattern repeatedly announced throughout the prophets.

This is why the Minor Prophets remain so important.

They reveal that divine judgment is not arbitrary. God’s judgments unfold within covenant history and covenant accountability. The prophets also demonstrate that outward religion cannot substitute for faithfulness, mercy, justice, and obedience. Again and again, the prophets expose the danger of trusting in institutions, rituals, national identity, or sacred places while ignoring the character and mission God requires of His people.

At the same time, the prophets consistently point beyond judgment toward restoration. Yet that restoration comes not through the preservation of corrupted systems, but through renewal centered in God’s reign. The hope anticipated by the prophets ultimately finds its fulfillment in the kingdom proclaimed by Christ.

The chapters that follow will examine several of these prophetic themes in greater detail. We will trace recurring covenant patterns through Hosea, Joel, Amos, Micah, Malachi, and Zechariah, observing how their warnings concerning corruption, false worship, failed leadership, and coming judgment anticipate themes later echoed by Jesus Himself. As these patterns accumulate, the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 emerges not as an isolated historical tragedy, but as the culmination of a long covenantal trajectory already deeply embedded within the prophetic witness of Scripture.

Endnote

1. Particularly Important Examples:

Hosea

“Out of Egypt I called my son” (Hosea 11:1)

Matthew applies this to Christ directly, showing how New Testament fulfillment can transcend the original historical reference.

Amos

“The fallen tent of David” (Amos 9)

Acts 15 applies this to Jew-Gentile unity in Christ rather than a separate future Jewish kingdom alone.

Joel

“I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh” (Joel 2)

Peter explicitly says: “This is that…”

Yet many futurist systems still move much of Joel into a future tribulation framework.

Malachi

The messenger preparing the way (Malachi 3–4)

The New Testament identifies this with John the Baptist, though some dispensational interpretations still reserve portions for future fulfillment tied to Elijah motifs.


Appendix 1 — The Minor Prophets: Timeframe, Audience, and Primary Message

The dates below are approximate. Scholars sometimes differ by a few decades, especially regarding Joel, Obadiah, and Malachi. The order below follows the traditional arrangement of the Twelve.

 

Major Themes Running Through the Twelve

Although each prophet addresses specific historical situations, several recurring themes unite them:

  1. Covenant Lawsuit
    • Israel and Judah are repeatedly accused of violating covenant obligations.
    • Idolatry, injustice, oppression, and false worship are central charges.
  2. The Day of the Lord
    • Often refers first to historical judgments (Assyria, Babylon, destruction of cities or nations).
    • Yet these judgments also become patterns anticipating broader covenant reckoning.
  3. Judgment and Restoration
    • The prophets rarely end with destruction alone.
    • Restoration language points forward to Messianic hope, renewed covenant, and the gathering of God’s people.
  4. Temple and Worship Critique
    • Sacrifices and religious ceremonies are condemned when disconnected from covenant faithfulness.
    • Amos, Hosea, Micah, and Malachi especially emphasize this.
  5. Universal Scope
    • The nations are not ignored.
    • God judges Assyria, Babylon, Edom, Philistia, Moab, and others, showing His rule extends beyond Israel.

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Next, see Chapter 3 - Gilead and the Pattern of Covenant Judgmentwhich is now posted.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Minor Prophets and the Fall of Jerusalem

The following is the first chapter of a nine part series. The next chapter will follow shortly.

Chapter 1 -  The Minor Prophets
and the Fall of Jerusalem


Reading the Prophets Again

Somewhere between what a text says and what people assume it says, misunderstanding can take root and grow for generations. This is especially true when the text in question is Scripture. The Bible has been preached, quoted, debated, defended, and misused in every age. Not because the people reading it are unintelligent. Not because the text itself is unclear. Rather, 2,000 years of interpretation, theological commentary, political use, translation choices shaped by history and ideology, and our tendency to look for support for what we already believe can stand between the modern reader and the words on the page. When historical context and authorial intent are neglected, that barrier can become so thick that hearing what the text actually says in its original setting can feel less like reading a familiar book and more like meeting a stranger who shares a name you thought you knew.

Familiar passages are often repeated so frequently that many assume they already know their meaning before they have examined their setting. We inherit conclusions, traditions, and systems of interpretation, and then read those assumptions back into the text itself. In that way, what is ancient can become hidden beneath what is familiar.

Some time ago I wrote an essay titled “Twisted Truths: How Deception and Assumptions Mislead Us.” In that work, I considered how easily inherited ideas and unexamined assumptions can shape the way we read Scripture. In the present study, I want to explore that same concern more closely by turning to the writings of the Minor Prophets in the Old Testament. Their messages provide a powerful example of how truth can be obscured when familiar interpretations are accepted without careful examination.

Why Context Matters

The prophetic books are among the clearest examples of this problem. Many readers approach the prophets mainly as books of prediction, searching for hidden timelines, future nations, or coded references to modern events. Yet when the prophets are read in their own historical setting, a different picture emerges. They were not first addressing distant generations. They were speaking to covenant people in their own day. They addressed kings, priests, merchants, judges, landowners, and worshipers. They confronted corruption, false religion, injustice, violence, pride, and misplaced trust. They interpreted national crisis through the lens of covenant faithfulness and covenant violation.

That point is crucial for this study. Before asking whether a prophetic warning may illuminate later events, we must first understand what that warning meant in its original setting. The prophets were not writing in a vacuum. They spoke into real moments of rebellion and crisis. Their words arose in the context of Assyrian pressure, Babylonian conquest, moral collapse, religious hypocrisy, and failed leadership in Israel and Judah. Historical context is not an optional extra. It is where interpretation begins.

By pattern, I do not mean that later events cancel the original meaning of earlier texts. I mean that God often deals with His people in recurring moral and covenant ways. The first meaning belongs to the prophet’s own day, yet the same realities may appear again in later generations.

Ezekiel and the Dry Bones

As an example of what I mean, though it is not from the Minor Prophets, consider the famous “dry bones” passage in Ezekiel 37. When read in the context of the surrounding chapters and the historical situation of its original audience, it is far more specific—and far less available for modern political application—than many popular interpretations suggest.

The vision of the dry bones is explicitly interpreted within the text itself, a rare and important feature that limits speculation. In verse 11, the text explains: “These bones are the whole house of Israel. They say, ‘Our bones are dried up and our hope is gone; we are completely cut off.’”

The vision is not a prediction about an event separated from its original audience by two and a half millennia. It is a healing image given to a specific community of exiles who believed their national life had ended. It offers hope that their condition was not final or irreversible. The bones come back to life not as a prophecy of twentieth-century statehood, but as a metaphor for the restoration of a people who believed themselves destroyed. To read it as a precise prediction of 1948 requires setting aside the interpretive context the text itself provides—and that is a significant choice.

From the Prophets to the First Century

Yet to say the prophets spoke first to their own generation does not mean their message ended there. The sins and covenant violations they exposed were not unique to one century. The covenant patterns they described could—and did—reappear. The same pride, the same abuse of power, the same confidence in sacred institutions, the same outward religion without inward obedience, the same rejection of divine warning—these are recurring realities in human history. Because of that, prophetic warnings may continue to speak whenever similar covenant conditions return.

This is especially important when we turn to the world of Second Temple Judaism. By the first century, the temple stood again, the city was active, religious life was structured, and covenant identity remained central. Yet the Gospels reveal familiar tensions: burdensome leadership, hypocrisy, neglect of justice and mercy, trust in outward privilege, hostility to prophetic voices, and confidence that sacred status would guarantee security. These are not foreign themes. They echo the very matters the prophets had long confronted.

Jesus himself spoke in this tradition. He did not treat Israel’s Scriptures as relics from a closed past. He used prophetic language, imagery, and patterns to address his own generation. His denunciation of corrupt leadership, his lament over Jerusalem, his warnings of judgment, and his declaration that these things would come upon “this generation” all place the first century within a larger covenant story already told in the Law and the Prophets. What had happened before could happen again. What had been warned before could be warned again.

Why the Minor Prophets Still Matter

This study will focus especially on the Minor Prophets. Though shorter in length, they are often sharp, direct, and morally penetrating. They speak with urgency about false worship, social injustice, corrupt leadership, national arrogance, covenant unfaithfulness, and coming judgment. They also speak of mercy, restoration, and hope beyond judgment. Their message is both severe and redemptive.

We should therefore approach these books with two commitments. First, we must honour their original context. Hosea speaks first to his own age. Amos must first confront his own society. Micah, Malachi, Joel, Zechariah, and the others must first be heard where they stood in history. Second, we must ask whether the covenant patterns they reveal help us understand later developments, especially the crisis of Jerusalem in the first century.

This distinction matters. I am not claiming that every oracle is a direct prediction of AD 70. Such an approach often creates more confusion than clarity. Rather, I am asking whether the prophets established recurring moral and covenant realities that reached another decisive expression in the generation that encountered Jesus and later saw Jerusalem fall.

If that is correct, then the Minor Prophets are not obscure voices trapped in an ancient world. They become living witnesses to the seriousness of covenant responsibility. They remind us that privilege does not cancel accountability, that religious form cannot replace obedience, that injustice invites judgment, and that God’s warnings are acts of mercy before they become acts of reckoning.

The prophets were not merely forecasting. They were demanding. They called people back to truth, justice, humility, and covenant faithfulness. Their words mattered then. They mattered again in the first century. And they still matter now.

We begin with Hosea, where a place name becomes more than geography. In Gilead we see how covenant corruption can be exposed through prophetic language and how one local warning may reveal a larger biblical pattern.
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Next, see Chapter 2 -  TheTwelve Prophets, Covenant Judgment, and the Question of Fulfillmentwhich is now posted.

 

 

 

 

 


 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Luke 15 and the Character of the Kingdom

Few chapters in Scripture are as familiar—or as narrowly understood—as Luke 15. The three parables it contains—the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the prodigal son—are most often read as simple illustrations of personal conversion. In that common reading, the emphasis falls almost entirely on the individual: the sinner who repents, the God who forgives, and the joy that follows. While this interpretation is not incorrect, it is incomplete. It removes the parables from their immediate context and, in doing so, obscures their primary force. Luke does not present these stories as isolated lessons about how individuals come to salvation. Rather, he records them as a unified response by Jesus to a specific accusation—one that strikes at the heart of His ministry and, more importantly, at the nature of the kingdom He proclaims.

The setting is crucial. Luke tells us that “tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to hear him,” while “the Pharisees and the scribes grumbled, saying, ‘This man receives sinners and eats with them’” (Luke 15:1–2). This complaint is not incidental. It is the interpretive key to everything that follows. The issue is not merely social but theological. The religious leaders are not simply objecting to Jesus’ behavior; they are challenging His understanding of God, righteousness, and covenant faithfulness. If Jesus truly represents the God of Israel, why does He associate so freely with the unrighteous? In response, Jesus does not argue in abstract terms. Instead, He tells three parables. These are not detached moral stories, but a sustained defense of His kingdom ministry. Through them, He reveals what God is like, how God acts, and why His actions provoke both joy and resistance.

The first parable introduces a shepherd who leaves ninety-nine sheep in order to seek one that is lost. When he finds it, he lays it on his shoulders and rejoices, calling others to celebrate with him, saying, “Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost” (Luke 15:6). The emphasis is not on the effort of the sheep but on the initiative of the shepherd. The lost does not return by its own strength; it is sought out and restored. Jesus draws the conclusion clearly: “there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance” (Luke 15:7). Already a contrast is forming, though it remains somewhat implicit.

The second parable reinforces the first while sharpening its focus. A woman loses one of her ten silver coins and searches diligently until she finds it. When she does, she calls her friends and neighbors together, saying, “Rejoice with me, for I have found the coin that I had lost” (Luke 15:9). Again, the emphasis falls on the one who searches, not on the lost object. The point is not simply recovery, but value. What is lost matters enough to be sought. As before, Jesus points beyond the story itself: “there is joy before the angels of God over one sinner who repents” (Luke 15:10). The repetition is intentional. Heaven rejoices when the lost are restored. But the question remains: how do others respond to that joy?

The third parable answers that question and brings the argument to its climax. A younger son demands his inheritance, leaves his father’s house, and descends into ruin. When he comes to himself and returns, expecting little more than a servant’s place, he is instead met with unexpected compassion. “While he was still a long way off, his father saw him and felt compassion, and ran and embraced him and kissed him” (Luke 15:20). The father does not delay restoration. He clothes his son, restores his status, and calls for a feast, declaring, “this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found” (Luke 15:24). At this point, the pattern established in the earlier parables appears complete. The lost is found, and joy follows.

Yet unlike the previous stories, the parable does not end here. Instead, the focus shifts to the older brother. When he hears the celebration, he refuses to enter. Luke tells us that “he was angry and refused to go in” (Luke 15:28). His complaint reveals the deeper issue: “Look, these many years I have served you… yet you never gave me a young goat, that I might celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours came… you killed the fattened calf for him!” (Luke 15:29–30). The older brother sees himself as faithful and deserving. He understands his relationship with the father in terms of service and reward. From his perspective, the celebration is not only excessive—it is unjust.

The father’s response is both tender and revealing. “Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. It was fitting to celebrate and be glad” (Luke 15:31–32). The parable ends without resolution. We are not told whether the older brother enters the feast. The silence is deliberate. It turns the story outward, confronting those who hear it.

At this point, the meaning of the chapter becomes clear. These are not merely stories about lost individuals being restored. They are revelations of the kingdom and exposures of those who fail to recognize it. The tax collectors and sinners who draw near to Jesus are like the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the younger son. They are being sought, restored, and welcomed. The joy described in the parables reflects the joy of heaven itself. But the Pharisees and scribes—those who grumble at Jesus’ actions—are represented by the older brother. They stand outside the celebration, not because they are excluded, but because they refuse to enter.

The problem, then, is deeper than moral failure. It is a failure to recognize the character of God as it is revealed in His kingdom. Those who consider themselves righteous are unable to rejoice in the restoration of others. In this way, the parables function as a form of covenant confrontation. They expose not only the lostness of sinners, but the blindness of those who believe themselves to be faithful. The leaders of Israel, who should have recognized and rejoiced in God’s restoring work, instead resist it.

When read in this light, Luke 15 presents a unified picture of the kingdom. It is a kingdom in which God actively seeks the lost, restores them freely, and rejoices openly over their return. At the same time, it is a kingdom that exposes false righteousness, revealing that proximity to the Father is not the same as sharing His heart. The dividing line is not between the morally good and the morally bad, but between those who recognize the work of God and those who do not.

Luke 15 certainly speaks to the reality of repentance and restoration, and for that reason it has long been used to describe personal conversion. But its primary focus lies elsewhere. It reveals how God, as King, is acting in the present, and how that action is received. Some are drawn in, restored, and welcomed. Others remain at a distance, questioning and resisting. The final question the chapter poses is not only whether one has been found, but whether one is willing to enter into the joy of the kingdom itself.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Gospel and the Pull of Geopolitics

When the Kingdom Is Reframed by the Nations

One of the more subtle challenges facing the modern church is not outright denial of the gospel, but its gradual reframing. The language of Christ, grace, and salvation remains intact, yet the controlling center of the message can shift—sometimes almost unnoticed. One such shift occurs when the story of redemption becomes tethered too closely to modern geopolitical realities.

This is most visible in movements often grouped under the term Christian Zionism, though the concern extends more broadly to what may be called geopolitical theology—the reading of Scripture through the lens of modern nations, borders, and political developments.

The issue is not whether such matters are important in their own right. Nations rise and fall under the providence of God (cf. Acts 17:26) —this was the case in biblical times, and there is every reason to believe it remains so today.  The question is whether we allow today’s geopolitics to reshape the meaning and focus of the gospel itself.

The Gospel’s Center: A Kingdom, Not a Nation

In the New Testament, the gospel is consistently presented as the announcement of a kingdom—the reign of God inaugurated in and through Jesus the Messiah. This kingdom is:
       not tied to a specific land (Jn 4:21–24),
       not limited to a single people group (Mt 8:11–12),
       and not advanced by political power (Jn 18:36).

Its defining feature is not geography, but allegiance to Christ the King.

When the gospel is proclaimed, the call is not to align with a nation, but to enter a kingdom. The invitation is not territorial, but relational; not political, but covenantal.

When Geography Reclaims the Center

Geopolitical theology, however, tends to reverse this emphasis. Even when done unintentionally, it can:     
      
relocate the focus of God’s purposes back onto a particular land,
       reintroduce ethnic or national distinctions as primary theological categories,
       and treat modern political developments as necessary fulfillments of prophecy.

At this point, an important question arises: on what theological basis are such moves considered necessary or justified? In doing so, it risks shifting the interpretive center of Scripture away from Christ and toward contemporary events.

The result is not always a denial of the gospel, but a reorientation of its gravity. Christ remains present, but the narrative increasingly revolves around something else.

The Subtle Displacement of the Gospel

This shift often manifests in several ways.

1. From Fulfillment to Deferral

The New Testament presents Christ as the fulfillment of the promises made to Israel (2 Cor 1:20). Yet some geopolitical frameworks effectively re-open those promises, placing their fulfillment back into a future national or territorial context.

The effect is subtle but significant: what the New Testament presents as accomplished is now treated as incomplete.

2. From Kingdom to Timeline

The gospel proclamation becomes intertwined with prophetic charts, timelines, and speculative sequences of events. The focus moves from:

Who is the King?
to

Where are we on the timeline?

This shift can lead to a form of discipleship shaped more by anticipation of events than by obedience to Christ.

3. From Mission to Alignment

Rather than the church being defined by its mission to the nations, there is a very real risk that it will become defined by its alignment with particular nations. Support for a geopolitical entity then comes to be viewed, implicitly or explicitly, as a measure of theological faithfulness.

Yet the New Testament consistently defines the people of God not by political alignment, but by their union with Christ and their participation in His mission—proclaiming the Kingdom.

4. From Christological Identity to Ethnic Distinction

The gospel proclaims the formation of one new people in Christ (Eph 2:14–16). Geopolitical readings, however, very often reintroduce a dual structure of identity, in which ethnic or national distinctions regain theological primacy.

This risks obscuring one of the central achievements of the cross: the creation of a unified people of God.

The Pastoral and Theological Risks

These shifts are not merely academic. They carry real consequences for how the gospel is understood and lived.    
      
Discipleship can be displaced by speculation.
       Mission can be overshadowed by political concern.
       Unity can be strained by differing geopolitical interpretations.

And the church’s hope can become tethered, however subtly, to the fortunes of earthly nations.

Perhaps most significantly, the gospel itself can be perceived less as the announcement of a completed work in Christ, and more as a prelude to events yet to unfold elsewhere.

Concrete Illustration: Land, Identity, and the New Testament Reframing

The concerns outlined above are not merely theoretical. They become clearer when examined in relation to specific claims commonly made within geopolitical readings of Scripture. Two areas in particular—land and identity—serve to illustrate how these interpretive shifts function in practice.

1. Land claims: The New Testament reinterprets the Abrahamic promise as fulfilled, expanded, and universalized in Christ

Christian Zionism typically rests on a literal reading of the unconditional land promise to Abraham’s physical descendants (Gen 12:1–3; 15:18; 17:8) and sees the 1948 re-establishment of Israel as its prophetic reactivation. This approach, however, must be weighed against several key developments within the New Testament itself:

The seed of Abraham is singular and Christological. Galatians 3:16 explicitly states, “The promises were spoken to Abraham and to his seed. Scripture does not say ‘and to seeds,’ meaning many people, but ‘and to your seed,’ meaning one person, who is Christ.” Verse 29 then concludes that “if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” The inheritance is no longer confined to a defined territorial inheritance—but every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places (Eph 1:3; cf. Heb 11:10, 16; 12:22 – the “heavenly Jerusalem”).

The New Testament explicitly describes the former covenantal structure as becoming obsolete in light of the new covenant established in Christ. Hebrews 8:13 declares the first covenant “obsolete and growing old” because the new covenant in Jesus’ blood has arrived (Jer 31:31–34 fulfilled in Luke 22:20). The land was always typological—a shadow of the sabbath rest that remains for the people of God (Heb 4:1–11). Once the reality (Christ) has come, the shadow is not re-instituted.

Jesus himself relocates the kingdom. In Matthew 21:43 he tells the Jewish leaders, “The kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit.” John 4:21–24 has Jesus telling the Samaritan woman that true worship will no longer be tied to any geographic mountain or temple. The kingdom is now “not of this world” (John 18:36) and spreads through gospel proclamation, not border expansion.

This reading does not deny God’s faithfulness to ethnic Israel in Romans 11; it insists that faithfulness now flows through incorporation into Christ, not through a parallel national track.

2. Special-status claims: The New Testament abolishes ethnic privilege in the new creation

Christian Zionism often treats modern Israel as still under a distinct divine favor or prophetic timetable that requires Christians to give it political priority. The counter-argument is that the new-covenant people of God are defined by faith, not ancestry:

One new humanity. Ephesians 2:11–22 describes Jews and Gentiles as reconciled into “one new person” in Christ; the dividing wall of hostility is gone. There is no longer a “special” national status that grants geopolitical privileges or exempts anyone from the need for personal faith in Jesus.

No Jew or Gentile in Christ. Galatians 3:28 and Colossians 3:11 are categorical: ethnic identity no longer determines covenant standing. Galatians 6:16 can even call the church “the Israel of God.”

The church, not the nation-state, is the temple and priesthood. 1 Peter 2:9 applies Exodus 19:6 language directly to the multi-ethnic church. Romans 11’s “grafting” metaphor pictures Gentiles being added to the same olive tree; it does not picture two separate trees or a future national reboot apart from the church.

How Christian Zionism’s geopolitical theology detracts from the gospel

The gospel, according to the New Testament, is the announcement that God has reconciled the world to himself in Christ, not counting trespasses against anyone (2 Cor 5:19). Christian Zionism’s emphasis on a restored national Israel as a prophetic necessity shifts the center of gravity:

From personal faith and repentance to geopolitical alignment. Christians can gradually be shaped to read newspapers (or various news feeds) as the primary locus of God’s activity rather than the cross and empty tomb.

From universal reconciliation to ethnic-national favouritism. This can functionally recreate the very “dividing wall” Ephesians says Christ demolished.

From making disciples of all nations to prioritizing the political interests of one particular nation’s policies. Eschatological speculation about temple rebuilding or end-times timelines can eclipse the Great Commission and the ethical demands of the Sermon on the Mount (love of enemies, peacemaking, justice for the oppressed).

From the already-inaugurated new creation (2 Cor 5:17) to a still-future geopolitical stage. The result is often a form of theological reasoning (shaped by political realities) that treats the modern state of Israel as an icon rather than a normal nation-state accountable to the same standards of justice as every other.

Practical and pastoral pitfalls

Theological distortion: Some versions of Christian Zionism flirt with a “two-covenant” idea (Jews saved by Torah, Gentiles by Christ), which the New Testament flatly rejects (Acts 4:12; Rom 3:29–30).

Ethical blind spots: Uncritical support can mute concern for Palestinian Christians, Arab believers, or any group caught in the conflict, violating the command to “do justice, love mercy” (Mic 6:8, still binding under the new covenant).

Prophetic credibility risk: When current events are constantly read as “fulfillment,” failed predictions or prolonged stalemates can disillusion believers and make the gospel seem like failed prophecy.

Idolatry of the state: Elevating any modern nation-state to quasi-sacramental status risks the very nationalism Jesus and Paul warned against.

The goal in pointing out these particular problems is not to delegitimize Jewish self-determination as a political reality. It is to insist that the church’s theology must be governed by the finished work of Christ and not by 20th–21st-century maps.

Re-centering on Christ

The corrective is not to ignore history, nor to dismiss the significance of nations. Scripture itself affirms God’s sovereignty over both. The corrective is to restore proper theological proportion.

The New Testament consistently directs attention to:
       Christ as the fulfillment of the covenant,
      
the church as the temple of the living God,
       and the kingdom as a present and expanding reality among all nations.

This does not eliminate complexity. It does, however, establish clarity.

The question is not whether God has purposes for the nations. The question is whether those purposes are understood through Christ, or whether Christ is understood through them.

Conclusion

Geopolitical theology becomes problematic not when it acknowledges the realities of nations, but when it allows those realities to reshape the gospel’s center of gravity.

The gospel announces that the kingdom has come, the King has been enthroned, and a new people has been formed. Its focus is not a land to be secured, but a reign to be entered; not a nation to be restored, but a creation to be renewed.

To keep the gospel central is to ensure that every other concern—however significant—remains properly ordered beneath it.

Only then can the church remain what it was always called to be: a people whose identity is grounded not in the shifting realities of this world, but in the unshakable reign of its King.

Chapter 4 - Joel, the Day of the Lord, and the Judgment of Jerusalem

This is Part 4 of a 9 part series - part 3 can be found at:  Chapter 3 - Gilead and the Pattern of Covenant Judgment. ______________________...