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An Exegetical Summary of Joel is unavailable, but you can change that!

How can the task of biblical exegesis be fruitful and meaningful when commentaries and lexicons provide contradictory interpretations and seem to support opposing translations? The 24-volume Exegetical Summaries Series asks important exegetical and interpretive questions—phrase-by-phrase—and summarizes and organizes the content from every major Bible commentary and dozens of lexicons. You can...

considers that to impute to Israel a specific sin when Joel does not would be to ignore the complexities of human existence in which apparently undeserved calamities do indeed occur; even the use of שׁוב šûḇ ‘to return’ in 2:13 is not conclusive proof that Joel is calling the people to repentance, for šûḇ can have senses other than ‘to repent’. Stuart believes that the strong eschatological nature of the book makes any rebuke of the people’s sin unsuitable: The calamities which have occurred
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