Joel Flashcards
Theme of Joel
The day of the Lord and what that day will mean for Israel and Israel’s enemies structures the book into its two halves
Structure of Joel
1:1 Superscription
1:2-14 The locust plague
1:15-20 Foreshadowing of the day of the Lord
2:1-11 The day of the Lord
2:12-27 The call to repentance
2:28-32 The gift of the Spirit
3 The last judgment
Message of Joel
A. The Plague of Locusts and the Day of the Lord (1:1-2:27).
1. The Locust Plague and Foreshadowing of Day of the Lord (1:2-20).
2. The Day of the Lord (2:1-11).
3. The Call to Repentance and Yahweh’s Response (2:12-27).
B. The Outpouring of the Spirit (Joel 2:28-32).
C. Judgment and Blessing (Joel 3)
“The day of the Lord” in Joel
- The phrase “day of the Lord” is found about twenty times in the OT prophets.
- First usage in Amos 5:18, where it is clearly a well-known popular concept, a day which is to be desired.
- Perhaps the term is eschatological, one eon giving way to another eon.
- Is 13, Ezek 7, and Joel 2, contain a “holy-war component” as providing the background of the term. Amos 5:18, which is usually taken as the starting point of the discussion, seems not to refer to holy war.
- The common factor in all is YHWH’s presence. Joel 2-3 and Zephaniah 1:1-2:3 contain the holy war theme.
- Amos 5:18 appears to indicate, however, that in the popular conception the day was a manifestation of YHWH in some theophonic way for Israel’s benefit.