MINOR PROPHETS BIBLE STUDIES COURSE

Session 4: Joel - the Prophet of the Day of the Lord
(Joel 1:1-3:20)
In the essence of what it means to experience life, the "day of the Lord" has its meaning. It represent not so much a specific period of time than it does a process, a sequence of events. It follows the natural movement of a common day. It has light. It has night. It has both in the scope of its duration.

Every day has its night. More accurately, every night has its day. For the Scriptures reveal that the new day always begins with the evening of the previous day. Moreover, that truth is merely representative of a deeper truth. Jesus said, ". . . except a seed falls to the ground and die, it abideth alone, but if it dies, it bringeth forth much fruit." Night and day, seed-time and harvest are the reality of experiencing life.

Ultimately, night and day, fall and spring, cold and heat, and seed-time and harvest are merely the reflection of the essence of what it means to be a created entity. In the essence of the mystery of the day being the oneness of the night and the light, all men have their existence. The writer of Genesis wrote, ". . . the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life." Man came into existence when the body of dust was inbreathed with the Sprit of God. He is the substance of the union of dust and Spirit.

Personal identity is found in the essence of that which is formed out of the dust of the ground and of the Spirit of God. A person is dust, yet he is more than dust. He is spirit, yet more than spirit. Man is uniquely the substance of the union of dust and of spirit.

It is within the interplay of the body and the Spirit that man experiences his life. When the body and the Spirit exist in harmony, life is good. The Spirit gloriously enables the body to experience all the sensations of a flourishing life. When the body and Spirit function in disharmony, life becomes bad. The senses become dull and the flourishing life is missed.

The harmony between the body and the Spirit is accomplished by both of them being what they are. In other words, the body is a created entity and the Spirit is the eternal God. In the mystery of oneness that which is not life experiences that which is life. The sum of the two produces a breathing creature.

Experiencing the immortal God in a mortal body brings with it a condition that man continually struggles to overcome. Created to know God in the full power of all of his senses, this capability to know often brings man into conflict with God as he experiences the process of how that life is experienced.

The body by being what it is, a created entity, is always dying. It is the nature of being formed out of a substance which does not have life. The Spirit by being what it is, the breath of God, is always living. Therefore, in the essence of what it means to be a human being, the earthly flesh must continually be taken down to enable the heavenly spirit to come forth in its glory. The implication seems clear. The joyful flourishing life of the Spirit comes only out of the painful perishing death of the flesh.

All of creation attest to the fact that life comes only out of death. Death and resurrection is the ground of being for all living creatures. It is this morning coming out of the night, this harvest coming out of the seed-time, this life coming out of death that is identified as the "Day of the Lord."

It has night, but it also has morning. It has planting, but it also has harvest. It has suffering, but it also has joy. It has death, but it also has life. It is the working of the Lord in the days of our lives.

There are many "days of the Lord." It is every time He brings life out death. The good life is experience when man lives in harmony with the "day of the Lord."

Joel spoke of the "day of the Lord" for Judah, the Southern kingdom. There is nothing known of Joel except what is found in the book that bears his name. There can be no better name for this book that reveals God’s judgment, God’s promise of His Spirit, and God’s restoration for the name Joel means "Jehovah is God." God brings judgment, God brings His Spirit, and God brings restoration, the secret and the mystery of life.

Tape 4 of the Series Contains the Recording of the Prophecy of Joel

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