![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/230518114031-8878f2582bd9a2de80108c9ffc59073c/v1/325cdc26869b34abffca805147cd6cbf.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
5 minute read
Rend heart!your
JOEL 2:12–17
WHEN we look around us at the issues faced by the world we live in – war, famine, human displacement, floods, earthquakes and the climate crisis – we can become very concerned about things that are happening away from home.
If we consider where we live – for me, in the UK – we have reason to be anxious and concerned about many things; homelessness, the cost of living, fuel prices, debt, the list goes on and on.
If we consider ourselves, what do we worry about? Perhaps our older relatives, our children, our health, our money or our work. Sometimes life can be full of worries, and it is hard to focus on anything else.
The prophet Joel speaks out at a time when the world around him was facing suffering. He comes with a voice of hope about a God of hope.
Pause And Reflect
To what extent are you currently experiencing suffering in your life?
Is your suffering physical, financial, relational, emotional, mental or spiritual? What is the most significant to you?
Our study passage begins with the words ‘even now’. What is the ‘even now’? In Joel 1, we read that locusts have ravaged the land, fires burn out of control across the dry landscape, famine threatens God’s people, wild animals and domesticated herds are thirsty and starving and drought intensifies the trouble, and that Judah looks and feels like a war zone.
Despite all that’s happening around them, the Lord declares through Joel: ‘Even now … return to me with all your heart, with fasting and weeping and mourning’ (v12).
Previously, Joel had called the priests to mourn, declare a holy fast, call a sacred assembly, and cry out to the Lord (see Joel 1:13 and 14). Now, Joel addresses all the people. Despite the tough times they are living through, Joel urges them all to respond to the Lord’s word encouraging them to: ‘Rend your heart and not your garments. Return to the Lord your God’ (v13).
Eugene Peterson’s The Message paraphrases this as: ‘Change your life, not just your clothes. Come back to God, your God’.
Everyone needs to come back to God with all their hearts, to be touched to their core. Paying lip service to God and giving him little attention needs to change. God requires their – and our – all.
Pause And Reflect
What aspects of your life have been challenging?
When you face trials and tribulations, how does it affect your relationship with God?
Where do you stand with the Lord right now?
I love to listen to music, and I also like to sing. For several decades, Frances Havergal’s song ‘Take My Life and Let It Be’ (SASB 623) has been special to me. Its lyrics can be set to a few tunes, and I do not have a preference, but whenever it is played or sung it gives me an opportunity to take stock of how I am doing spiritually. Two verses come to mind:
Take my life and let it be Consecrated, Lord, to thee; Take my moments and my days, Let them flow in ceaseless praise.
Take my will and make it thine, It shall be no longer mine; Take my heart, it is thine own, It shall be thy royal throne.
For me, it is always to do with allowing God to take my will. When I give that over to his control and not mine, that is when my heart is most likely to be his royal throne. When these are lined up, the joy and freedom, peace and passion that I experience are extraordinary. You might wonder why I would ever want to live outside of that. Yet, when difficulties arise, it is possible for my surrender to God’s will to slip and, before long, my heart is no longer his ‘royal throne’.
Pause And Reflect
How do we respond under pressure or in a crisis?
To what extent do we want to take control?
At such times, how might we prepare ourselves to walk humbly with our Lord?
Joel brings hope to the people. He says: ‘Return to the Lord your God, for he is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love’ (v13).
Sometimes we need to make some life changes for us to receive the hope of salvation and live in God’s extravagant love. With nothing but God to rely on, God’s people are called to rely on him more. It is possible for faith to be revived, and for wandering hearts to refocus on the Lord.
We need to remember how patient and kind God is – slow to anger, gracious and compassionate – and that Jesus offers ‘life in all its fullness’ (John 10:10 Good News Bible). This requires us to give our hearts fully to him during all circumstances. We find him in the pain as well as the joy. It is part of our daily journey of being with him.
In urging the people to get involved in a holy fast and a sacred assembly, Joel is clear that this is for all – young and old – and is to be seen as a priority. In verse 17, the priests are called to lead the way in repentance and prayer.
Pause And Reflect
In what ways should we change our lives, not just our clothes?
I pray that I will ‘rend my heart’ every day, repenting when I don’t give him my heart as his royal throne, and allowing him to be in control in all circumstances. Would you do that too?
Prayer Matters contains daily devotions covering specific areas in the territory, current worldwide situations and personal reflection and relationship with God. A PDF of the unedited booklet is available to download from salvationist.org.uk/resources
Pentecost Focus
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/230518114031-8878f2582bd9a2de80108c9ffc59073c/v1/6b137eb54bb954bdb27c66d1a144d013.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/230518114031-8878f2582bd9a2de80108c9ffc59073c/v1/5863e38e6108659f491be9b10f3175b2.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
by Lyndall Bywater (Prayer Network)
SATURDAY 20 MAY – ACTS 2:38
Peter told the crowds in Jerusalem that they could repent and turn to Jesus, and that they would then be able to ‘receive’ the Holy Spirit. Lord, forgive us when we make do without your Spirit. Today we choose to receive the gift of your Spirit again. Amen.
SUNDAY 21 MAY – ACTS 2:46
After the initial thrill of receiving the Spirit and telling the world about Jesus, we find the believers going about their daily lives, sharing meals and enjoying each other’s company. Lord, help us not to ‘over-spiritualise’ the gift of your Spirit. May we find you bubbling up in all the ordinary things we do this week. Amen.
MONDAY 22 MAY – ACTS 4:31
When the going got tough, somehow the early Church got more determined. That resilience is a gift of the Spirit. Lord, we pray today for those who don’t think they can go another step. By your Spirit, fill them with courage and strength. Amen.
TUESDAY 23 MAY – ACTS 6:3
The gift of the Holy Spirit was for everyone, and it was considered as essential for practical jobs as for so-called ‘spiritual’ ones. Lord, teach us to welcome your power in everything we do. Amen.
WEDNESDAY 24 MAY – ACTS 10:9–34
Jesus’ followers had to get used to the Spirit disrupting their agendas, their timetables and even their theology. The Spirit led Peter to ideas and experiences which would previously have been unthinkable to him. As he opened his mind and heart, the Kingdom advanced. Holy Spirit, help us to trust you when you ask us to think the unthinkable and to embrace new ways of seeing your world. Amen.
THURSDAY 25 MAY – ACTS 13:2
The leadership of the Church in Antioch heard a clear command to send Saul and Barnabas to take the gospel to communities they had never set foot in. Lord, we pray today for pioneers, those who have been called to go and plant an expression of Church in a new place. Give them creativity, wisdom and courage. Amen.
FRIDAY 26 MAY – ACTS 13:6–12
With no handbooks or ‘how to’ guides, life in the early Church must have been part frightening, part exhilarating. The disciples learnt to listen to the prompting of the Holy Spirit within them, to know if a situation was safe or unsafe, right or wrong. Lord, hone in us the ability to recognise the prompting of your Spirit and to discern the truth about the situations we find ourselves in. Amen.
Prayer Requests
Do you have something or someone you’d like us to pray for? Email salvationist@salvationarmy.org.uk with ‘prayer request’ in the subject line and the Territorial Prayer Network will uphold them in prayer.