Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Joel 2:27
And ye shall know that I [am] in the midst of Israel, and [that] I [am] the LORD your God, and none else: and my people shall never be ashamed.
27. The restoration of the people’s prosperity will further give them the assurance that Jehovah is in their midst, and will continue their defender and deliverer for ever.
in the midst of Israel ] as its present helper and saviour: comp. Exo 17:7; Num 11:20; Num 14:14; Deu 7:21; Deu 31:17; Jos 3:10; Hos 11:9; Isa 12:6 al.
and that I am Jehovah your God ] Cf. Joe 3:17, “And ye shall know that I am Jehovah your God.” The phrase is a stereotyped one, which occurs (with or without your God) often in certain parts of the O.T., usually to denote the conviction produced by some great act of judgment or deliverance upon those who witness it. In Ezekiel (who uses it with ye, they, or thou, as the case may be more than 50 times) it is a standing refrain, coming often at the end of a paragraph, or a prophecy, as Eze 6:7; Eze 6:10; Eze 6:13-14, Eze 7:4; Eze 7:9; Eze 7:27, Eze 20:42, Eze 25:5; Eze 25:7; Eze 25:11; Eze 25:17, Eze 36:38, Eze 37:13; Eze 37:28, Eze 39:6-7; Eze 39:22; Eze 39:28: it occurs also several times in the priestly sections of the Pent. (Exo 6:7; Exo 7:5; Exo 14:4; Exo 14:18; Exo 16:12; Exo 29:46), and occasionally besides (Exo 10:2 [cf. Exo 8:18 b ]; 1Ki 20:13; 1Ki 20:28; Isa 49:23; Isa 49:26; Isa 60:16). Comp. the writer’s Introduction, p. 276 f.
and (that) there is none else ] For who but Jehovah can cause the heavens to give forth rain (Jer 14:22), or the earth to bear fruit abundantly? Comp. Isa 45:5-6; Isa 45:18; also Deu 4:35; Deu 4:39, 1Ki 8:60.
28 32 (ch. 3 in the Hebrew). The hearts of His people having been directed towards Him ( Joe 2:26-27) by the material benefits conferred in Joe 2:23-25, Jehovah promises next to superadd spiritual gifts; He pours forth His spirit upon them, with the result that all are endowed with clearer perceptions of Divine truth ( Joe 2:28-29): His own people being thus provided for, the signs of an approaching judgement upon the nations will then manifest themselves ( Joe 2:30 f.); amid which, however, those who, in virtue of the regenerating influence of the spirit ( Joe 2:28), are become the true children of God, will be delivered ( Joe 2:32).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And ye shall know that I am in the midst of Israel – God had foretold their rebellion His forsaking them, the troubles which should find them, and that they should say, Are not these evils come upon us, because our God is not among us? Deu 31:17. It had been the mockery of the Pagan in their distress, Where is their God? Joe 2:17. Now, by the fulfillment of His promises and by all Gods benefits, they should know that He was among them by special grace as His own peculiar people. Still more was this to be fulfilled to Christians, in whose heart He dwells by love and grace, and of whom He says, Where two or three are gathered together in My name, there will I be in the midst of them. In the highest sense, God was in the midst of them, in that God the Son, equal to God the Father as touching His Godhead, did, in the truth of human nature, take our flesh. This to see and know, is glory and bliss ineffable. Therefore He repeats, and by repeating, confirms, what he had said, And My people shall never be ashamed. Yea, glorious, magnified, honored, shall be the people, to whom such a Son was promised, and of whom He was born. Glorious to them is that which the Apostle saith, that He took not on Him the nature of Angels, but He took the seed of Abraham, and this glory shall be eternal.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Joe 2:27
My people shall never be ashamed.
Religion, a source of constant confidence
Joel was the bearer of very heavy tidings. Their sins had exceeded the bounds of Divine patience.
I. The character under which the persons mentioned in the text appear before us. He calls them My people. This shows that they belong to God by some peculiar appropriation. He speaks of them as having His favour, as deriving blessings from Him, and as feeling, under a consciousness of His presence abiding with them, a confidence which the wicked never possess. They are a chosen people; a sanctified people; and an obedient people. They are always set upon obedience, and sorry when they do not render it.
II. The honourable and encouraging statement which God makes concerning them. My people shall never be ashamed.
1. They shall not be ashamed of their principles. Which serve them at all times. And they are good, profitable to society, and calculated to advance the interests of men!
2. They are not ashamed of the singularity which distinguishes their conduct.
3. Of the confidence which they repose in God. And they shall not be ashamed amid the terrors of the last great day. (W. Curling, M. A.)
Not ashamed
After the desolation caused by the locusts is to come a time of great fruitfulness. In the words, My people shall never be ashamed, we have a great principle of Gods government announced, and the promise is emphatically repeated.
I. The significance of the promise. It covers all history, and the whole individual life, and reaches on within the veil. The promise involves–
1. An implied assertion of surrounding troubles and conflict. Much which is calculated to put men to shame, and to cause doubt and sorrow; e.g., loathsome diseases, fearful crimes, error perverting and hindering truth, drunkenness, ignorance, immorality at our doors and in our streets. Where sin is, there must be shame.
2. An express encouragement to stedfast faith. God undertakes for His people.
3. A sure prediction of final triumph. The promise has progressive fulfilment. Shame and fear are again and again beaten back until the last victory comes, and shame and sin are left behind for ever.
II. The character of those to whom the promise is made. Gods people are put in antithesis with the heathen, the ungodly, the unbelieving. They are those who have turned to Him in true penitence, have experienced His pardoning love, and now trust in Him. They are led by the Spirit. Can we take the comfort of this promise? On one side of mans destinies is certainty of shame; on the other, assurance of glory. Troubles shall issue in joy; trials shall conduct to triumph. (W. Saumarez Smith, B. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
And ye, who repent, pray, are blessed with such answer to your prayers,
shall know; by experience shall see, and acknowledge.
That I am in the midst of Israel; my true Israel, obedient Israel; I am with them to bless them, defend them, guide them, and provide for them.
That I am the Lord; the almighty and everlasting God.
Your God, as I was the God of your father Abraham; yours in peculiar manner by covenant, and to redeem you from evil.
And none else; that there is not a god beside me, that the idols you formerly doted upon were no gods, that the idols the heathen boast of are a doctrine of lies, and deceive them that trust on them.
My people shall never be ashamed: see Joe 2:26.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
27. know that I am in the midst ofIsraelAs in the Old Testament dispensation God was present bythe Shekinah, so in the New Testament first, for a brief time by theWord made flesh dwelling among us (Joh1:14), and to the close of this dispensation by the Holy Spiritin the Church (Mt 28:20), andprobably in a more perceptible manner with Israel when restored (Eze37:26-28).
never be ashamednot anunmeaning repetition from Joe 2:26.The twice-asserted truth enforces its unfailing certainty. As the”shame” in Joe 2:26refers to temporal blessings, so in this verse it refers to thespiritual blessings flowing from the presence of God with His people(compare Jer 3:16; Jer 3:17;Rev 21:3).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And ye shall know that I [am] in the midst of Israel,…. The presence of God among his people shall be so manifest, the tokens of it so clear, that it shall be easily known, by the impressions of his love upon them; the teachings of his Spirit in them; the usefulness of the word and ordinances to them; the spiritual and heavenly frame of soul they shall be favoured with, and the savouriness of their conversation; this is the blessing Christ has promised to Gospel ministers and churches, Mt 28:20;
and [that] I [am] the Lord your God, and none else; that he is their covenant God and Father, and acknowledge none else:
and my people shall never be ashamed; which is repeated for the certainty of it; see Joe 2:26.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
They will learn thereby that Jehovah is present among His people, and the only true God, who does not suffer His people to be put to shame. The repetition of , by which the promised grace is guaranteed to the people for all ages, serves as a rhetorical rounding off of the section (see at Joe 2:20).
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
He repeats the same sentence; and in the beginning of the verse he unfolds what I have already said — that the miracle would be such as to constrain the people to praise God. Ye shall know that I am in the midst of Israel: and this was the case, because God showed not in an ordinary way his kindness to them, and especially because it had been foretold, and also because this reason had been adduced — that God was mindful of his covenant. The manner, then, in which he dealt with them, and farther, the prediction itself, left to the people no pretext for ignorance. Hence the Prophet now says, ‘Ye shall know that I am in the midst of Israel,’ and still more, ‘that I am Jehovah your God.’ By these words the Prophet reminds us, that the deliverance of the people from their evils was to be wholly ascribed to the gratuitous mercy of God; for we have already seen, that things would have been past hope, had not this consolation been added — ‘Turn ye even now to me.’ The Prophet therefore repeats, that there would be no other reason why God would deal so kindly with his people, and so mercifully spare them, but this — that he dwelt in the midst of Israel: but whence was this dwelling, except that God had gratuitously chosen this people? This indeed availed much to raise up the people; for how could they have hoped that God would be propitious to them, had they not been reminded of this truth that God was dwelling in the midst of them? Not because they were worthy, but because he deigned to come down to them.
He afterwards adds, And none else. By this sentence the Prophet more sharply stimulates them to return immediately to God; for if they deferred longer disappointment would be in delay. That the Jews, then, might not, after their usual manner, procrastinate, he says that there is no other God; and thus he shows that there was no remedy for their evils, except they sought to be reconciled to God. “There is then no God besides me, and I dwell in the midst of thee.” The Lord claims to himself every power, and then kindly invites the people to himself, and for this reason, — because he dwells in the midst of them. That the people, then, might not form other expectations, God shows that all their hope was in him alone. He farther shows, that salvation was not to be sought afar off, provided the people had not forgotten the covenant, that God was dwelling in the midst of them. But a higher doctrine follows —
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(27) I am in the midst of Israel.This Divine assurance, similar to that with which the book ends, prepares the way for the spiritual blessings about to be announced.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Joe 2:27 And ye shall know that I [am] in the midst of Israel, and [that] I [am] the LORD your God, and none else: and my people shall never be ashamed.
Ver. 27. And ye shall know that I am in the midst of Israel ] These temporal blessings shall seal up my love to you and presence of grace with you. True it is that no man knoweth either love or hatred by all that is before them, Ecc 9:1 ; because all things come alike to all, Joe 2:2 . But yet from this text we may comfortably conclude, that if the good things of this life make us more cheerful, thankful, hopeful; if mercy excite us to duty, and the sense of God’s love make us love God, his ways, and people, with a desire to love them more; then we are loved of God, who is in us of a truth, 1Jn 4:10 ; 1Jn 4:19 , and we may know it too. For if instinct of nature teach dams to know their young ones, and the young their dams, shall not God’s Spirit teach us to know him, that he is in the midst of us, not by his omnipresence only, but by his gracious presence? yea, that he is the Lord our God, and none else; and that while we hold us to this anchorhold of the faithful soul, we shall never be ashamed, Psa 31:1 . That was a brave speech of Luther, and one of those that a man would fetch upon his knees from Rome or Jerusalem to be author of them, Ipse videret ubi anima mea mansura sit, qui pro ea sic solicitus fuit, ut vitam pro ea posuerit, Let him see to it where my soul shall rest, who took so much care for it as that he laid down his life for it (Joh. Manl. loc. com.).
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
ye shall know, &c. Reference to Pentateuch (Lev 26:11-13. Deu 23:14). App-92. Compare Eze 37:26-28.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
I am: Joe 3:17, Lev 26:11, Lev 26:12, Deu 23:14, Psa 46:5, Psa 68:18, Isa 12:6, Eze 37:26-28, Zep 3:17, 2Co 6:16, Rev 21:3
that I: Isa 45:5, Isa 45:18, Isa 45:21, Isa 45:22, Isa 53:6, Eze 39:22, Eze 39:28
and my: Joe 2:26, 1Pe 2:6
Reciprocal: 1Ki 8:60 – the Lord Psa 25:20 – let Psa 31:17 – Let me Isa 29:22 – Jacob shall Isa 45:17 – ye shall not Eze 37:6 – ye shall Zep 3:11 – shalt thou Rom 9:33 – and whosoever
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Joe 2:27. Shall know . . . Lord your God, and none else. This is very sig-nificant, for the main iniquity of Israel was their worship of false gods. But the captivity was destined to cure them permanently of that spiritual disease as predicted here. The historical quotation that shows the fulfillment of this prediction is given at Isa 1:25 in volume 3 of this COMMENTARY.