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In
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Introduction 2
VI. Conclusion 8
Endnotes 9
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I. Introduction
The preserved words of Joel ben Pethuel (i.e., “Joel, son of Pethuel”) tell us nothing
about his biography other than the name of his father, which is an unusual fact in the
writings of the prophets. There is no clear indication of the time when the prophet was
active. But through his message we can see that he was a man open to be led by the spirit
of the LORD. Joel’s citations and reflections of earlier prophetic saying reveal him as a
conscientious student of his predecessors of the prophetic movement (i.e., Amos,
Zephaniah, Isaiah, Micah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Obadiah, Jonah, Nahum and Malachi), moved
to speak boldly of judgment, repentance and forgiveness to a people amidst an extreme
difficulty.
Dating Joel’s activity and his book is a matter of dispute. A few scholars place his
existence as early as the 9th century BCE, and some still argue that it is pre-exilic. But most
scholars today favor a post-exilic setting, and place Joel’s book between 500 and 350 BCE.
Several passages assume the existence of the Second Temple, the priesthood, and daily
sacrifices. There is no mention of a king or royal court, but priests and elders are the
community’s leaders. The walls of Jerusalem have been restored (2:7, 9) as it happened
under Nehemiah’s direction. The community is not facing external threats. All evidence
seems to point to the conditions of Judah during the Persian period, when it was a small
province of the Persian Empire.
The prophecy of Joel extends from the calamity of his days up to time when the
people of God will be restored on the day of the LORD. Consequently, Joel may be correctly
called the prophet of the day of the LORD. This day of the LORD is mentioned five times in
the book (1:15; 2:1.11.31; 3:14). The book of Joel has particular interest for Christians,
thanks to the citation of Joel’s prophecy of the day of the LORD (2:28-29) in the book of
Acts in relation to the events of Pentecost. Though attributed to a minor prophet, the book
of Joel has intrinsic importance for Jewish and Christian theologies.1
2:12: “Yet even now," declares the LORD, "Return to Me with all your heart, and with
fasting, weeping and mourning;”
2:13: “And rend your heart and not your garments." Now return to the LORD your
God, For He is gracious and compassionate, Slow to anger, abounding in
lovingkindness And relenting of evil.”
2:14: “Who knows whether He will not turn and relent And leave a blessing behind
Him, Even a grain offering and a drink offering For the LORD your God?"3
repentance is a plea and a command, followed by specific instructions. The people are to
return to the LORD with “all their heart”, an inner disposition expressed through outward
behaviors of “fasting, weeping and mourning”. The LORD is clear: “Rend your heart, and not
your garments!” (2:13). Tearing one’s garments in lamentation was an expression of deep
emotion in times of grief, terror, horror or misfortune (Gen. 37:29, 34; Num 14:6; 2 Sam
3:31; 1 Kings 21:27; Ezra 9:3), but this is not what the LORD wants from his people. God’s
plea for repentance speaks of God’s desire for people to change their heart.
In Biblical Hebrew, the idea of repentance is represented by two verbs: ( שובshuv =
to return) and ( נחםnicham = to feel sorrow). In the same idiomatic context, the heart
symbolizes what the brain symbolizes in contemporary culture: it is understood as the seat
of will and intellect, not as the source of emotions. God, by calling his people to “render
their hearts”, is asking them to return to him in a deliberate act of will, resulting from a
rational decision affirmed by emotional contrition. The appeal to love, worship and obey God
with “all one’s heart” is repeated throughout Israel’s history (Deut 6:6; Jer 4:4; 32:39-40;
Ezek 18:31).
Other prophets also present the notion of repentance as the change of one’s life that
requires “turning around” or going in the opposite direction (Isa 9:13; Jer 5:3; Amos 4:6, 8-
9; Hag 2:17). In Joel, nevertheless, God is asking Judah to make a change based on the
nature of God, not on the actions of the people. Verse 13 implies this with the words “your
God”, alluding to the covenant between God and Israel: “They shall be my people and I will
be their God” (Jer 32:38; Jer 31:33).
The nature of God expressed in a statement is found eight more times in the Old
Testament (Exod 34:6-7; Num 1:8; Neh 9:17; Pss 86:15; 103:8; 145:8; Jonah 4:2; Nah
1:3). The form in Joel is probably taken from Jonah 4:2, since Joel 4:14 also draws on
Jonah 3:9. The adjectives used to describe God’s qualities are “gracious” (hannun = )חנון
“merciful” (rahum = )םרחו, “slow to anger” (erek apayim = )אפים ארך, and “compassionate”
(NIV) or “abounding in steadfast love” (NRSV) or “abounding in lovingkindness” (NAB).
Lovingkinndess is a composite word to describe God’s supreme quality of commitment with
regards to God’s relationship to God’s people (hesed = )סחד. God’s graciousness is his total
goodwill of a superior to an inferior. His mercifulness can be defined as the love of a mother
for her child. The literal interpretation of “slow to anger” is “of a long nose”.4This poetic
image describes a God whose wrath takes a long time to appear as fire coming out of God’s
nostrils—therefore this is a God with a “long nose”. This God is not quick to punish, but
waits patiently for his people to repent for their sins and return to him. God’s “steadfast
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Forgiveness is God’s free Grace, independent of human actions. The Bible speaks of
a God who remains faithful to his people, even when they abandon and forget him. But,
when God calls the strayed people to himself, repentance is a condition humans must fulfill
in order for them to experience restoration in their relationship with God. The fruits of
repentance is the human “return” to God, the renewal of the covenantal relationship, and
the enjoyment of Divine blessings that are seen as prosperity, longevity, power, protection,
expansion over other nations, and national unity. Seen in this context, repentance is then a
fundamental part of God's requirements for the human creature. In the book of Joel,
repentance, seen as a divine requirement as well as a plea for renewal of the covenantal
relationship, becomes a gift from God that humans must receive in order to experience
salvation.
In the prophetic literature, repentance from sin is a central theme. Even though
almost all prophets name the sins for which God is asking people to repent, in the book of
Joel, the nature of people’s sins is not specified. But Joel’s name, which means “Yahweh is
God”, as well as verses 2:27 and 3:17, may indicate that the primary sin that the prophet
had in mind was the sin of apostasy, the failure to recognize that Yahweh alone was God.
By asking his people to repent, God also instructs people how to repent. As an inner
change that requires cognitive and emotional processes followed by behavioral changes,
repentance is presented in the prophetic literature as a process that happens in necessary
and inherently coherent stages. These stages involve a clear understanding of the meaning
of repentance, divine and human acts preceding the act of repentance, repentance as total
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conversion leading to the experience of salvation, and human acts that follow repentance.
The stages, outlined as follows, present repentance as the Divine contition that humans
must accept in order for them to experience salvation.
a. God calls the people to repent through prophets that God commissions for this
purpose. The prophets’ mission is to tell the people the truth about God’s imminent
judgment, if the people fail to repent. The prophets are accountable for speaking God’s
word to the people as it is, regardless of people’s resistance to listening. False prophets
encourage people to continue sinning by not telling them that they need to turn (i.e.,
repent) from their wicked ways (Ezek 13:22).
The prophets who do not have the heart to tell the people God’s Word and
compromise the truth, are held accountable by God for the lost souls that result (Ezek 33:7-
9, 14-16). People in sin need to hear exactly what God's word says. To withhold the truth is
against God’s will and is of no help to anyone; instead, it leads people to perdition (Jer
23:12; 26:2,3; Isaiah 6:10).
b. The people must acknowledge their participation in sin. Before the people decide
to change, they must recognize their guilt by means of their transgressions. When honest
people hear the truth preached, they see the how they participate in sin through their
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thoughts, attitudes and actions. Others, when confronted with their sins, refuse to admit
guilt and ask, "What sin? What do I have to repent of?" (Mal 3:7). As long as they defend
their practice and refuse to admit error, the people have not repented (Jer 3:12f; 8:4-6;
5:3; 44:4,5; Jonah 3:8,10; Amos 4:6-11).
c. The people must feel heartbreaking pain for having sinned against God. In Joel
2:12,13, the Judeans are told to turn to God (repent) with weeping and mourning. To tear
their heart, not their garments. God wants not mere outward expressions of grief but
sincere, deeply felt sorrow and contrition (Isaiah 57:15; 66:2; 22:12-14; Jer 31:19; 5:3;
6:26; Jonah 3:5-8; Ezra 10:1).
a. It is possible for the people to feel sorry for their wrongdoings without consciously
changing their ways. In the prophetic literature, repentance means a total conversion of
thoughts, attitudes and outward behaviors toward God and fellow humans, without which
salvation from God cannot be experienced. This conversion must be heartfelt in order to
result in the development of proper attitudes (Joel 2:12,13; Ezek 18:31; Jer 24:7).
b. Although God’s forgiveness is a free gift, depends solely on God’s freedom to
forgive when and whom God chooses, and can cannot be solicited through human
repentance, yet repentance is a divine prerequisite (i.e., condition) in order for human
creatures to experience God’s forgiveness. Lack of repentance signifies spiritual death and
eternal separation from God (Ezek 18:21-23,27,28,30-32). The wicked must turn from evil
and do right or they will die (spiritually). Divine forgiveness is experienced only after the
human decision to change (Joel 2:12-14; Jer 36:3,7; Isaiah 55:7).
a. Repentance involves the conscious decision to change one’s ways and remain
consistent in this change. A sign of repentance is that the people—who “turned from their
ways”—no longer commit sinful acts. To avoid death, the wicked must turn from evil and do
right, keeping God's laws. The real fruit of repentance is conscious abandonment of the
wicked ways and a commitment to act according to God’s will (Ezek 18:21-32; Jonah
3:8,10; Isaiah 55:7; Jer 4:1; 18:8,11; 44:4-5; 25:3-7).
b. Repentance involves conscious and continuous acts of restitution toward God and
toward people, following the experience of forgiveness. The ones who were wicked must not
only walk in the statutes, but also return what they stole (Ezek 3:14,15). When Israelite
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men had married foreign women, contrary to God's law, they had to repent and put away
their wives and children (Ezra 10:3,11,17,19,44).
VI. Conclusion
Joel 2:12-19 is the lection for Ash Wednesday in most churches. Its call at the
beginning of every Lenten season is for the rendering of our hearts, for that deliberate
exercise of will and thought that will turn our lives in opposite directions and point us
toward God. Biblical faith involves making up our minds to be obedient to God and then
making the conscious effort to walk in God’s way. This we cannot do by our own powers,
but only with God’s help.
Repentance, like grace, is a gift from God, which God offers us through the voice of
Joel—and all the other prophets—clearly outlining the steps we my take to complete it. As
we take these steps we must always remember that our repentance cannot limit God’s
freedom to grant or deny us forgiveness. Remembering this keeps us humble before God,
as we approach God “with fear and trembling” (Phil 2:12), always praying, always hoping,
always having faith in God’s abundant, everlasting, ever needed mercy.
Maria Grace, Ph.D.
ENDNOTES
1
Wolff, H. Joel and Amos: A Commentary on the Books of the Prophets Joel and Amos,
Augsburg Fortress Publishers (October 1977)
2
The New Interpreter’s Bible, Abington Press, 1996, p. 304
3
New American Standard Bible, 1995
4
Heschel, A. The Prophets, Jewish Pubn Society, June 1969, p. 171
OTHER SOURCES
www.Βίβλος.com
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