Joel 1:16-17 | |
16. Is not the meat cut off before our eyes, yea, joy and gladness from the house of our God? | 16. An non coram oculis nostris cibus excisus est? e domo Dei nostri gaudium et exultatio? |
17. The seed is rotten under their clods, the garners are laid desolate, the barns are broken down; for the corn is withered. | 17. Putrefacta sunt grana subtus sulcos suos, desolata sunt reconditoria (vel, apothecae desolatae sunt,) diruta sunt horrea, quia exaruit frumentum. |
He repeats the same thing as before, for he reproaches the Jews for being so slow to consider that the hand of God was against them.
He afterwards adds, that joy and gladness were taken away: for God commanded the Jews to come to the temple to give thanks and to acknowledge themselves blessed, because he had chosen his habitation among them. Hence this expression is so often repeated by Moses, 'Thou shalt rejoice before thy God;' for by saying this, God intended to encourage the people the more to come cheerfully to the temple; as though he said, "I certainly want not your presence, but I wish by my presence to make you glad." But now when the worship of God ceased, the Prophet says, that joy had been also abolished; for the Jews could not cheerfully give thanks to God when his curse was before their eyes, when they saw that he was their adversary, and also when they were deprived of the ordinances of religion. We now then perceive why the Prophet joins joy and gladness with oblations: they were the symbols of thanksgiving.
He shows the cause of the evil,
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