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Nov 20: Neh 8 | Joel 3 | 2 Thes 3

Reading 1 - Neh 8:10

"The joy of the LORD is your strength" (Neh 8:10).

"Perhaps what we should pray for most is to be taught how to enjoy God, for this is the foundation of all constructive life, and by nature we are so woefully lacking in even the realization of its existence. By nature we are coarse and ignorant and animal and worldly, and we naturally seek our 'joy' in coarse and ignorant and animal and worldly things. To give the name 'joy' to such is a desecration of the word. Joy must be the root of all action, not its goal. Joy must come first, flooding in upon us by the realization of the beauty and glory and love of God. The contemplation of beauty is a joyful thing. The personal, active, communing contemplation of the highest, fullest, love-radiating beauty is the most intense joy possible... Let us use that strength to the utmost" (GV Growcott).


Reading 2 - Joel, overview

Nothing is known for certainty about the ancestry of Joel, or about him personally. There is even some uncertainty as to the precise time when he prophesied, although the prophecy itself provides a number of clues, as shall be seen.


Literal Locusts?: Joel pictures an enormous locust invasion brought by God upon His land, as a punishment and a warning to His people (Joel 1:15; 2:11). The devastation wrought by the locusts brings the inevitable famine, and Joel chronicles the suffering of man and beast alike, in its wake (Joel 1:4,5,9-12,16-18).


Outline


1. The locust plague as a foretaste of the Day of the Lord: Joel 1:1 – 2:17


a) The calamity: Joel 1:1–20

b) The scourge as the forerunner of the judgment day: Joel 2:1–17


2. The averting of judgment and bestowal of blessings: Joel 2:18 – 3:21


a) The Lord's restoration of Judah: Joel 2:18–27

b) The outpouring of the Holy Spirit: Joel 2:28–32

c) Judgment upon the nations: Joel 3:1–16

d) The blessings on God's people: Joel 3:17–21


Historical Application: But Joel has more in mind than a literal plague of locusts. Whether there was, in Joel's day, a real such infestation, or whether the prophet is presenting an idealized picture merely based on the well-known phenomenon of such plagues... either way, he definitely also has in mind a real army, of men, not insects (Joel 1:6,7; 2:1-7).


What was this army which Joel saw sweeping down upon the Land of Israel? Most likely the Assyrians of Sennacherib, who first devastated most of the north of Israel, and then turned upon the south of Judah, besieging and capturing most of its fortified cities (2Ki 17; 18; Isa 36; 37). Assyria was joined in its onslaught upon Judah and its capital Jerusalem by the Arab nations of Tyre and Zidon, Edom and Egypt (Joel 3:4,19). Egypt was the natural enemy of Assyria, but that did not stop the Egyptians from using Judah's misfortune as a chance to ravage their share of Judah's south. Would the Assyrian hordes also destroy Jerusalem, along with Temple of the LORD? Or would God at last spare His own city? The answer lay in Israel's reaction to this great invasion of human "locusts" (Joel 2:12-14). True repentance and faith would save Jerusalem from the Assyrians. Led by their fine king, Hezekiah, the people did repent, and the Assyrian confederation was destroyed by the Angel of the LORD (2Ki 19; Isa 38): "Then the LORD will be jealous for his land and take pity on his people" (Joel 2:18). "And everyone who calls on the name of the LORD will be saved; for on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there will be deliverance, as the LORD has said, among the survivors whom the LORD calls" (Joel 2:32; cp Joel 2:20; 3:16).


Last Days Application?: But this historical fulfillment is, as we have come to expect, only half the picture. The normal pattern of Bible prophecy, with few exceptions, is the presentation of a two-fold message:


  • a contemporary reference to events in or near the days of the prophet (necessary to confirm his credentials as a true prophet: Deu 18:20-22), and

  • a Messianic application, having to do with the first Coming or the second Coming, or -- quite often -- both. In this, Joel does not disappoint us. Seen in a first century application, the apostle Peter cites Joel as an explanation for the Holy Spirit being poured out on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2:16-21). Peter used Joel's prophecy as the basis for his appeal to the people to repent and be baptised, and so be saved (Acts 2:37-40). Seen in a Last Days perspective, every indication is that Joel envisions an attack by a great Arab confederacy upon a faithless nation of Israel. These Arab peoples were previously too weak, but now at last [because of continual arm supplies from the West, and/or from the former USSR?] they are finally strong enough to accomplish their goal (Joel 3:9,10). Such an attack will be initially successful (see Joel 3:1-7), destroying much of Israel's livelihood and reducing God's people to helplessness. It will then be only by a renewal of their faith, in the God of their fathers, that a remnant of Israel will be saved when -- once again and to a far greater extent than ever before -- "....the LORD will roar from Zion and thunder from Jerusalem; the earth and the sky will tremble. But the LORD will be a refuge for his people, a stronghold for the people of Israel" (Joel 3:16).

How do we know that this great alliance of the Last Days will be Arab? (a) In Hebrew, the words for "locust" (arbeh) and "Arab" (arbi) are practically identical. (b) The nations actually mentioned by Joel (the ones "on every side": Joel 3:12) are Tyre and Zidon (Lebanon and Syria, in modern terms) and Philistia (exactly equivalent, linguistically, to the "Palestinians"!) in Joel 3:4; and Egypt and Edom (modern Jordan and/or Saudi Arabia) in Joel 3:19. In order to defeat Israel, these will line up with "Assyria" (modern equivalent: Iraq, or just possibly Syria, or even both). (c) The phrase "Prepare for [or make holy] war" (the literal meaning of Joel 3:9) suggests a jihad, or Moslem holy war. The first attack, in Joel's day, by Assyria and its allies was seen by its leaders as a "holy war" -- between Ashur the god of Nineveh and Jehovah (or Yahweh) the God of Israel (Joel 2:17; 2Ki 18:22,25,30-35; 19:14-19). And now, in our day, though the Arab "god" is called by a different name, the controversy is the same: whether "Allah" the god of Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, et al is greater than Yahweh the God of Israel.


Temple Mount Controversy: The controversy of the Last Days, between Arab and Jew, is preeminently about:


  • Zion (Joel 2:1,15,23,32; 3:16,17,21),

  • God's holy mountain (Joel 2:1; 3:17),

  • Jerusalem (Joel 2:32; 3:1,16,17,20), and

  • the house of the LORD (Joel 3:18)....

...where, after Israel's defeat and true repentance, a great Divine deliverance will come, and where the LORD God will dwell once again "in the midst of Israel... and my people shall never again be put to shame" (Joel 2:26,27).


A great deal of language in Joel (regarding sacrifices and services) suggests that the Last Days will see a resurgence of religion in Israel. It is possible that a revived Judaism will accelerate and exacerbate a controversy with the devotees of Islam -- over their own "holy places" on Mount Zion, in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem. To what extent such Temple worship may develop before Christ returns (even to the removal or destruction of the ancient "Dome of the Rock" to provide the site for a modern Jewish Temple), one cannot be certain. But many other Last Days prophecies point to a controversy in or over God's holy place or mountain or Temple -- so many, in fact, that this possibility must loom large: Eze 25:3; 36:2,3; Psa 79:1-4; 83:12; Rev 11:1-3; 2Th 2:3,4; Isa 14:13,14; Oba 1:16,17; Mal 3:1; Dan 9:24-27; 11:31,45; 12:11; Mat 24:15; Mar 13:14; and Luk 21:20-24.


Revelation Parallels: There are numerous and striking correspondences between Joel 1,2 and Revelation 8,9:


  • Locusts (Joel 1:4; Rev 9:3)

  • Like a nation? (Joel 1:6; Rev 9:4,7)

  • Teeth like lions' teeth (Joel 1:6; Rev 9:8)

  • Trees, pasture burnt up (Joel 1:12-20; Rev 8:7)

  • Destruction from God (Joel 1:15; Rev 9:11)

  • Fire (Joel 1:19; 2:3,5; Rev 8:7; 9:17)

  • Rivers of water dried up (Joel 1:20; Rev 8:10; 9:14)

  • Blowing of trumpets (Joel 2:1,11,15; Rev 8:6)

  • Darkness (Joel 2:2; Rev 9:2,18)

  • Horses (Joel 2:4; Rev 9:7,9)

  • Chariots (Joel 2:5; 9:9)

  • Torment (Joel 2:6; Rev 9:6)

  • Earthquake (Joel 2:10; Rev 8:5)

  • Sun, moon, and stars are darkened (Joel 2:10,31; 3:15; Rev 8:12; 9:2)

  • "Turn to me," says God! (Joel 2:12; Rev 9:20,21)

  • The "locusts" go back to the abyss (Joel 2:20; Rev 9:1)

  • Day of Atonement (Joel 2:15-17; Rev 8:2-4)

  • Deliverance for the faithful remnant (Joel 2:32; Rev 9:4)

It is reasonable to conclude that Joel and Rev 8; 9 describe the same events. Therefore it is possible to deduce a Last Days application: a battle for Jerusalem and its holy places, fought by Jew and Arab, which ends with Christ returning to Israel to save the faithful remnant who call upon him (Joel 2:32; 3:20). This interpretation is supported by the observation that the sounding of the first six trumpets (Rev. 8; 9), with their sense of immediacy and urgency, culminates in the sounding of the Seventh Trumpet (Rev 11:15-19) and "the time for the dead to be judged". And so Joel contributes his share of details to the ever-changing (and sometimes mysterious) mosaic of future events, a challenge and consolation for every student of Bible prophecy.


Reading 3 - 2Th 3:6

"In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, we command you, brothers, to keep away from every brother who is idle [or 'disorderly': AV] and does not live according to the teaching you received from us" (2Th 3:6).

This verse describes not false teachers, but those whose way of life is contrary to the apostolic norm. The "disorderly" meant the idlers, or loafers, who rapidly turned into "busybodies" (2Th 3:7,10,11). The word translated "disorderly" ("idle" in NIV) here is also translated "unruly" in 1Th 5:14. It is actually a military term for those "out of step" when marching, and thus "insubordinate". This lack of discipline in the case of the Thessalonian ecclesia was manifested in a refusal to work (vv 8,10,12), perhaps because of a misguided belief that Christ's imminent return rendered labor unnecessary.

 

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