Learn Joel 1: What It Means and Why It Matters
Chapter Summary: The Point
God’s word comes to Joel, the son of Pethuel, and Joel 1 calls the elders and all the inhabitants of the land to listen. A devastating locust plague has consumed what earlier waves left behind, and the destruction touches vines, fig trees, grain, wine, oil, orchards, fields, livestock, and water brooks. Joel commands the people to tell the disaster to their children because the event demands covenant memory across generations. Drunkards, farmers, vineyard keepers, priests, and ministers of the altar all receive direct summons to mourn. The ruined harvest also interrupts temple worship because meal offerings and drink offerings can no longer come to the Lord’s house. Therefore, Joel calls for a sanctified fast, a solemn assembly, gathered elders, and public crying out to God. The chapter names the disaster as a sign that the day of the Lord is near. It teaches that severe loss should drive God’s people to truthful lament, corporate repentance, and urgent prayer.
Outline: The Structure of Joel 1
- Verse 1: God’s word comes to Joel, the son of Pethuel
- Verses 2-4: Elders and inhabitants must remember the locust devastation
- Verses 5-7: Drunkards must wake up because wine, vine, and fig tree are ruined
- Verses 8-10: The land, priests, offerings, grain, wine, and oil mourn
- Verses 11-12: Farmers and vineyard keepers wail because harvest joy has withered
- Verses 13-14: Priests must mourn, sanctify a fast, and gather the people
- Verses 15-18: The day of the Lord is near, and food, joy, seed, barns, and animals fail
- Verses 19-20: Joel cries to God because fire, drought, and devastation cover the land
Context: The Setting
Literary Flow and Genre: Joel 1 belongs within The Locust Plague and the Call to Lament in Joel 1:1-20. Joel, son of Pethuel, speaks prophetic poetry to Judah and calls the whole land to interpret disaster before God. Therefore, readers should follow repeated commands to hear, tell, wake, wail, mourn, sanctify, gather, and cry. The chapter uses locust devastation as both historical crisis and theological warning. Joel 2 will intensify the alarm through the day of the Lord, a call to return, and God’s promised mercy.
History and Culture: Locust swarms could strip crops, vines, trees, and pasture until people and animals faced hunger. Because Judah’s worship used grain, wine, and oil, agricultural ruin also disrupted temple offerings. Joel names elders, inhabitants, drunkards, farmers, vineyard keepers, priests, and ministers because the disaster reaches every layer of life. The purpose is pastoral and prophetic. Joel teaches the people to stop treating the crisis as ordinary hardship and to cry to God together.
Joel 1 Commentary: The Walkthrough
Verse 1: The Word to Joel
The book opens with God’s word coming to Joel, the son of Pethuel. The message begins with divine initiative. Joel does not speak as a social observer.
His father’s name identifies him, but the verse gives no royal date. That silence places attention on the message itself. The chapter centers on the disaster, the summons to lament, and God’s claim on the land.
Therefore, Joel 1 begins with authority. The prophet’s words carry God’s summons to a people facing devastation.
Verses 2–3: Hear and Tell
Joel commands the elders and all inhabitants to hear. The disaster requires public attention. He asks whether anything like this happened in their days or their fathers’ days.
Then he commands generational testimony. Parents must tell children, children must tell their children, and another generation must hear. Memory becomes obedience.
The point concerns more than historical reporting. Judah must preserve the event as a covenant warning. Therefore, lament should become instruction for future faithfulness.
Verse 4: Fourfold Locust Devastation
Joel describes wave after wave of destruction: “What the swarming locust has left, the great locust has eaten.” Nothing remains secure after the repeated invasion.
The great locust, grasshopper, and caterpillar continue the pattern. The verse may describe four kinds of locusts or four stages of devastation. Either way, the emphasis falls on total loss.
This sequence prepares the whole chapter. Each later group mourns because the land has lost its produce at every level.
Verses 5–7: Drunkards Awakened
Joel tells drunkards to wake, weep, and wail. Those who depended on wine now face its removal. Sweet wine has been cut off from their mouths.
A strong nation without number has come against the land. Joel describes its teeth like a lion and its fangs like a lioness. The locust swarm acts like an invading army.
The vine lies waste, and the fig tree loses bark until its branches turn white. Therefore, ordinary pleasure, agricultural wealth, and covenant symbols all suffer. The judgment reaches both appetite and inheritance.
Verses 8–10: Worship Interrupted
Joel calls the land to mourn like a young wife in sackcloth. The grief is deep and covenantal. The image communicates loss, not decorative sadness.
Then Joel names the temple crisis: “The meal offering and the drink offering are cut off from the LORD’s house.” The priests and ministers mourn because worship lacks what the fields should supply. Agricultural ruin has reached the altar.
The field lies waste, the land mourns, grain is destroyed, new wine dries up, and oil languishes. Therefore, the crisis touches bread, joy, worship, and anointing oil together.
Verses 11–12: Farmers and Joy Wither
Joel turns to farmers and vineyard keepers. The workers closest to the soil must face the loss directly. Wheat and barley have perished in the fields.
The vine dries up. The fig, pomegranate, palm, apple, and all field trees wither. The catalogue widens the damage beyond one crop.
Then Joel gives the human result. Joy has withered away from the sons of men. Therefore, the land’s condition becomes the people’s condition. When provision collapses, celebration cannot continue unchanged.
Verses 13–14: Priests, Fast, and Assembly
Joel commands the priests to put on sackcloth and mourn. Temple leaders must lead public repentance. They cannot continue as if worship remains normal.
The ministers of the altar must lie all night in sackcloth because offerings are withheld from God’s house. Then comes the public command: “Sanctify a fast. Call a solemn assembly.” Private grief must become gathered prayer.
Joel tells them to gather elders and all inhabitants to the house of God and cry to the Lord. Therefore, the right response includes confession, fasting, assembly, and urgent petition.
Verses 15–16: The Day at Hand
Joel cries, “Alas for the day!” because the day of the Lord is at hand. The present disaster points beyond itself. It comes as destruction from the Almighty.
Food has been cut off before their eyes. Joy and gladness have also vanished from God’s house. The people can see the evidence without needing secret knowledge.
Therefore, Joel interprets the plague theologically. The crisis warns Judah about the Lord’s coming day. Loss becomes a summons to seek mercy before greater judgment arrives.
Verses 17–18: Seeds, Barns, and Animals
Seeds rot under their clods. Even the future harvest is threatened. The problem reaches beneath the soil, where hope should begin.
Granaries lie desolate, and barns break down because grain has withered. Then the animals groan. Herds lack pasture, and flocks of sheep suffer desolation. Creation shares the burden of human crisis.
Therefore, Joel shows a whole-life disaster. Fields, storage, animals, worship, and families all suffer. The people must cry to God because no ordinary solution can restore what has collapsed.
Verses 19–20: Joel Cries to God
Joel himself turns from addressing the people to prayer. The prophet joins the lament he commands. He says, “LORD, I cry to you,” because fire has devoured the wilderness pastures.
The flame has burned the trees of the field. The animals pant to God because water brooks have dried up. Even the beasts become witnesses to need.
Thus, the chapter ends in prayer rather than explanation alone. Joel names the devastation and brings it before God. Therefore, faithful lament does not stop with grief. It cries to the only one who can restore.
Timeline: The Dates
- In Joel’s day: God’s word comes to Joel, the son of Pethuel (Joel 1:1).
- In your days or in the days of your fathers: Joel asks whether such devastation has happened before (Joel 1:2).
- Another generation: The people must tell their children, grandchildren, and later generations (Joel 1:3).
- After successive locust waves: Each remaining crop is eaten by another destroyer (Joel 1:4).
- All night: Priests and ministers must lie in sackcloth because offerings are withheld (Joel 1:13).
- When the solemn assembly is called: Elders and inhabitants gather to the house of God and cry to him (Joel 1:14).
- The day of the Lord is at hand: The present devastation signals coming judgment from the Almighty (Joel 1:15).
- Before our eyes: Food, joy, and gladness are cut off from the people and from God’s house (Joel 1:16).
Application: The Practice
Personal Faith and Discipleship
- Listen during loss | Joel calls elders and inhabitants to hear before he explains the disaster. Faithful discipleship receives severe disruption as a summons to seek God, not merely as a problem to manage. References: Joel 1:2-4.
- Tell the next generation | Joel commands parents to pass the memory to children and later generations. Christians should teach children how to interpret both mercy and warning under God’s rule. References: Joel 1:3.
- Wake from dull comfort | Drunkards must wake and weep because wine has been cut off. The chapter exposes the temptation to sleep inside appetite, habit, or pleasure while spiritual danger grows. References: Joel 1:5-7.
- Cry to God | Joel ends by crying to God over fire, dry streams, and suffering animals. Personal lament should move toward prayer because God receives honest cries from his people. References: Joel 1:19-20.
Church and Community
- Recover public lament | Joel summons elders, inhabitants, priests, and ministers into shared grief. Churches should make room for truthful prayer when sin, loss, or disaster affects the whole community. References: Joel 1:2, 13-14.
- Connect worship and daily life | The ruined harvest cuts off meal and drink offerings from God’s house. In that setting, faithfulness meant seeing field and altar together; Christian communities now should bring work, provision, and worship under one Lord. References: Joel 1:9-10.
- Gather before God | Joel commands a fast, a solemn assembly, and gathered prayer. Therefore, churches should respond to serious crisis with shared humility rather than scattered anxiety. References: Joel 1:13-14.
- Grieve creation’s suffering | Animals groan, pasture disappears, and water brooks dry up. A faithful community should see creation’s distress as part of the burden it brings before God. References: Joel 1:18-20.
Leadership and Teaching
- Call people to hear | Joel begins with elders and inhabitants because leaders and people must face God’s word together. Teachers should resist softening severe passages when Scripture calls for attention. References: Joel 1:2-4.
- Lead repentance visibly | Priests and ministers must put on sackcloth, mourn, and call the assembly. Leaders should model humility before calling others to it. References: Joel 1:13-14.
- Explain disaster theologically | Joel connects locust devastation with the nearness of the day of the Lord. Teachers should avoid shallow explanations and help people seek God’s meaning through Scripture. References: Joel 1:15-16.
- Move lament into prayer | Joel’s final response is direct prayer to God. Leaders should help people name loss clearly, then bring it to God with trust and urgency. References: Joel 1:19-20.
Interpretive Options: The Differences
Are the locusts literal, symbolic, or both?
- Broad consensus: Joel 1 describes a real devastation that ruins agriculture, worship, and public joy. The locust language is concrete and fits the chapter’s concern for grain, wine, oil, vines, trees, animals, and water. Therefore, the literal crisis should remain primary.
- Historic Christian reading: Many Christian interpreters also see the locust plague as a sign that points toward the day of the Lord. The disaster becomes prophetic because it reveals the seriousness of judgment. This reading lets the physical event carry theological weight.
- Symbolic-prophetic reading: Some interpreters emphasize the locusts as an image of invading armies. Joel 1 can support the comparison because verse 6 calls the destroyer a nation with lion-like teeth. Even so, the chapter’s agricultural detail keeps the concrete plague in view.
What is the day of the Lord in Joel 1?
- Broad consensus: The day of the Lord refers to God’s decisive intervention in judgment. In Joel 1, the present disaster signals that the day is near. Later chapters will expand the theme with both judgment and salvation.
- Historic Christian reading: Christian interpreters often read the phrase through the whole canon. God judges sin in history, yet Scripture also points to final judgment and final salvation in Christ. Joel 1 begins that larger movement by making the present crisis a warning.
- Pastoral Christian reading: Teachers should avoid treating the phrase as a detached end-times label. Joel uses it to call people to lament, fasting, assembly, and prayer. The doctrine should produce repentance, not speculation alone.
Why do the priests receive special commands?
- Broad consensus: The priests receive commands because the locust disaster interrupts temple offerings. Meal offerings and drink offerings require grain and wine, so agricultural loss affects worship directly. Priests must therefore lead lament.
- Historic Christian reading: Many Christian interpreters see here the close link between worship and the life of the land. Ministers cannot act as if worship remains untouched when the people and creation suffer. Their leadership must become visible humility.
- Pastoral Christian reading: The passage gives leaders a serious pattern. Spiritual leaders should help the people gather, fast, and cry to God when crisis exposes deep need. Leadership begins with shared repentance, not mere analysis.
Common Misreadings: The Mistakes
“Joel 1 is only about farming trouble.” The chapter describes locust devastation, failed crops, and suffering animals, yet it also addresses worship, priests, fasting, assembly, and the day of the Lord. Joel interprets agricultural disaster as a theological summons. The fields and the house of God belong together.
“The call to mourn means God rejects joy permanently.” Joel says joy has withered because the land and worship have collapsed. The command to mourn fits the crisis. Later hope in the book will show that lament prepares the people for mercy and restoration.
“Only priests need to respond to the disaster.” Joel commands priests and ministers to lead, but he also addresses elders, inhabitants, drunkards, farmers, vineyard keepers, and future generations. The crisis reaches everyone. Therefore, the response must include the whole community.
Leading: The Teaching Guide
The Aim: Joel 1 teaches that devastating loss should awaken God’s people to hear, remember, mourn, gather, fast, and cry to God as the day of the Lord draws near (vv. 2-4, 13-20). Teachers should help people see lament as faithful response to covenant crisis.
A Teaching Flow:
- Begin with verses 1-4 and show the authority of Joel’s message, the call to hear, and the generational memory of the locust devastation.
- Move through verses 5-12 and trace how the disaster reaches wine, vine, fig tree, grain, oil, farmers, and joy.
- Use verses 13-14 to explain the priests’ role, sackcloth, fasting, solemn assembly, and corporate prayer.
- Spend careful time on verses 15-18, where Joel connects visible loss with the day of the Lord.
- Finish with verses 19-20, showing Joel’s own cry to God and the suffering of the land and animals.
The Approach: Teach the chapter as prophetic lament with a direct call to gathered prayer. Keep the agricultural details concrete because they show how deeply the disaster affects worship, work, food, animals, and joy. In the wider storyline of Scripture, Joel 1 prepares readers for the later promise of restoration and the outpouring of the Spirit, fulfilled through Christ’s saving work and gift to his people.
Cross-References: The Connections
Exodus 10:1-20 – Describes the plague of locusts in Egypt, showing God’s power to judge through agricultural devastation.
Deuteronomy 28:38-42 – Warns that covenant disobedience can bring locusts, failed harvests, and lost produce.
1 Kings 8:35-40 – Teaches that drought, blight, locusts, and plague should move God’s people to prayer and repentance.
Psalm 78:46 – Remembers God giving crops to the caterpillar and labor to the locust during judgment.
Isaiah 24:4-13 – Portrays the land mourning, joy fading, and the earth suffering under judgment.
Amos 4:6-9 – Names famine, blight, mildew, and locusts as warnings meant to turn people back to God.
Matthew 6:16-18 – Teaches fasting before the Father, clarifying the kind of sincere humility Joel calls for.
Acts 2:16-21 – Cites Joel’s later promise and connects the day of the Lord with the Spirit’s outpouring and salvation.
James 5:17-18 – Connects prayer with drought and rain, showing that God rules creation and hears faithful petition.
Further Study: The Articles
Coming Soon!
Joel 1 Commentary: Locust Devastation and Lament