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They[a] have destroyed my vines;[b]
they have turned my fig trees into mere splinters.
They have completely stripped off the bark[c] and thrown it aside;
the twigs are stripped bare.[d]

A Call to Lament

Wail[e] like a young virgin[f] clothed in sackcloth,
lamenting the death of[g] her husband to be.[h]
No one brings grain offerings or drink offerings
to the temple[i] of the Lord anymore.[j]
So the priests, those who serve the Lord, are in mourning.

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Footnotes

  1. Joel 1:7 tn Heb “it.” The Hebrew describes the locust swarm as a collective singular throughout vv. 6-7. The translation opts for plural forms envisioning the many locusts at work in order to better fit the descriptions from an English point of view.
  2. Joel 1:7 tn Both “vines” and “fig trees” are singular in the Hebrew text, but are regarded as collective singulars. Either the prophet speaks in the first person singular about his own vine in order to personalize the description, or we hear the voice of God speaking, and “my vine” and “my fig tree” do double duty to both represent the foliage being destroyed as well as the nation.
  3. Joel 1:7 tn Heb “it has completely stripped it bare.”
  4. Joel 1:7 tn Heb “grow white.”sn Once choice leafy vegetation is no longer available to them, locusts have been known to consume the bark of small tree limbs, leaving them in an exposed and vulnerable condition. It is apparently this whitened condition of limbs that Joel is referring to here.
  5. Joel 1:8 sn The verb is feminine singular, raising a question concerning its intended antecedent. A plural verb would be expected here, the idea being that all the inhabitants of the land should grieve. Perhaps Joel is thinking specifically of the city of Jerusalem, albeit in a representative sense. The choice of the feminine singular verb form has probably been influenced to some extent by the allusion to the young widow in the simile of v. 8.
  6. Joel 1:8 tn Or “a young woman” (TEV, CEV). See the note on the phrase “husband to be” in the next line. The word בְּתוּלָה (betulah) can be used as a technical term for “virgin” but often just refers to a young woman, perhaps to a woman who has not had children.
  7. Joel 1:8 tn Heb “over the husband of her youth.” The death of the husband is implied by the wailing.
  8. Joel 1:8 sn Heb “the husband of her youth.” The woman described here may already be married, so the reference is to the death of a husband rather than a fiancé (a husband-to-be). Either way, the simile describes a painful and unexpected loss to which the national tragedy Joel is describing may be compared.
  9. Joel 1:9 tn Heb “house.” So also in vv. 13, 14, 16.
  10. Joel 1:9 tn Heb “grain offering and drink offering are cut off from the house of the Lord.”