Joel 1:19

Context1:19 To you, O Lord, I call out for help, 1
for fire 2 has burned up 3 the grassy pastures, 4
flames have razed 5 all the trees in the fields.
Joel 2:7
Context2:7 They 6 charge 7 like warriors;
they scale walls like soldiers. 8
Each one proceeds on his course;
they do not alter 9 their path.
Joel 3:13
Context3:13 Rush forth with 10 the sickle, for the harvest is ripe!
Come, stomp the grapes, 11 for the winepress is full!
The vats overflow.
Indeed, their evil is great! 12
1 tn The phrase “for help” does not appear in the Hebrew, but is supplied in the translation for the sake of clarity.
2 sn Fire here and in v. 20 is probably not to be understood in a literal sense. The locust plague, accompanied by conditions of extreme drought, has left the countryside looking as though everything has been burned up (so also in Joel 2:3).
3 tn Heb “consumed.” This entire line is restated at the end of v. 20.
4 tn Heb “the pastures of the wilderness.”
5 tn Heb “a flame has set ablaze.” This fire was one of the effects of the drought.
6 sn Since the invaders are compared to warriors, this suggests that they are not actually human, but instead an army of locusts.
7 tn Heb “run.”
8 tn Heb “men of battle.”
9 tc The translation reads יְעַבְּתוּן (yÿ’abbÿtun) for MT יְעַבְּטוּן (yÿ’abbÿtun). The verb found in MT (עָבַט, ’avat) means “take or give a pledge” (cf. Deut 15:6, 8; 24:10) and does not fit the context. Some scholars have proposed various emendations: (1) יְעָוְּתוּן (yÿ’avvÿtun, “they make crooked”); (2) יָטּוּן (yattun, “they turn aside”); (3) יָעַוּוּן (ya’avvun, “they err”); and (4) יְעָבְּתוּן (adopted in the present translation) from the root I עָבַת (’avat, “to twist, pervert”) or II עָבַת (’avat, “to change, abandon”). KBL adopt the latter option, but the only biblical evidence for this is the problematic reference in Joel 2:7. Another option is to view it as a variant of the root חבט (khavat, “turn aside from”), a meaning attested for the Arabic cognate. The difference in spelling would be due to the interchange of the guttural letters khet (ח) and ayin (ע). This may lay behind LXX rendering ἐκκλίνωσιν (ekklinwsin; cf. Syriac Peshitta nstwn and Vg declinabunt). See S. F. Whitley, “‘bt in Joel 2, 7,” Bib 65 (1984): 101-2.
10 tn Heb “send.”
11 tn Heb “go down” or “tread.” The Hebrew term רְדוּ (rÿdu) may be from יָרַד (yarad, “to go down”) or from רָדָה (radah, “have dominion,” here in the sense of “to tread”). If it means “go down,” the reference would be to entering the vat to squash the grapes. If it means “tread,” the verb would refer specifically to the action of those who walk over the grapes to press out their juice. The phrase “the grapes” is supplied in the translation for clarity.
12 sn The immediacy of judgment upon wickedness is likened to the urgency required for a harvest that has reached its pinnacle of development. When the harvest is completely ripe, there can be no delay by the reapers in gathering the harvest. In a similar way, Joel envisions a time when human wickedness will reach such a heightened degree that there can be no further stay of divine judgment (cf. the “fullness of time” language in Gal 4:4).