Reading
Joel 1:1-12

1Yahweh’s word that came to Joel, the son of Pethuel.

2Hear this, you elders,

and listen, all you inhabitants of the land!

Has this ever happened in your days,

or in the days of your fathers?

3Tell your children about it,

and have your children tell their children,

and their children, another generation.

4What the swarming locust has left, the great locust has eaten.

What the great locust has left, the grasshopper has eaten.

What the grasshopper has left, the caterpillar has eaten.

5Wake up, you drunkards, and weep!

Wail, all you drinkers of wine, because of the sweet wine,

for it is cut off from your mouth.

6For a nation has come up on my land, strong, and without number.

His teeth are the teeth of a lion,

and he has the fangs of a lioness.

7He has laid my vine waste,

and stripped my fig tree.

He has stripped its bark, and thrown it away.

Its branches are made white.

8Mourn like a virgin dressed in sackcloth

for the husband of her youth!

9The meal offering and the drink offering are cut off from Yahweh’s house.

The priests, Yahweh’s ministers, mourn.

10The field is laid waste.

The land mourns, for the grain is destroyed,

The new wine has dried up,

and the oil languishes.

11Be confounded, you farmers!

Wail, you vineyard keepers,

for the wheat and for the barley;

for the harvest of the field has perished.

12The vine has dried up, and the fig tree withered—

the pomegranate tree, the palm tree also, and the apple tree,

even all of the trees of the field are withered;

for joy has withered away from the sons of men.


Devotional

My friend came home from school each to hear the same thing, ‘if you don’t tidy up your room I will put everything in bin liners and put them all in the front garden for everyone to see.’  Every day she said the same thing ‘yes mum I’ll do it tonight.’  This went on for months, her mums request for a tidy room and her empty promise that she would tidy it up.  One day she arrived home to see the entire contents of her bedroom in bin liners in her front garden, much to her horror but everyone else’s laughter.  ‘It’s not like I didn’t warn you’ her mum explained.  I can’t remember quite what happened next other than to say her room never got that messy again.

The book of Joel opens with an account much worse than bedroom contents on the lawn, it is the telling of a disaster following a plague of locust where nothing is left.  The children of Israel had heard the voice of God through the prophets for many years, ‘Turn your hearts back to God.’  They still went to the temple, they still went through the motions of sacrifices and giving their offerings of grain and oil, but God was crying out I don’t want your offering I want your heart.  Now through the locust God had removed their grain and olives and everything, no more could they present their empty offerings.  Now after all this time of asking and warning finally he had their attention, but what he really wanted was their hearts.