HEBREW WORD STUDY – LOCUST – RAVAH רבה
Joel 2:25: “And I will restore to you the years that the locust have eaten, the cankerworm and the caterpillar and the palmerworm my great army which I sent among you.”
Very little is known about the prophet Joel. He is mentioned only once, in the first chapter of the Book of Joel. The style of writing and events of the Book of Joel would tend to make him a contemporary of Habakkuk, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel. The name Joel is a word which combines the name of God Jehovah “Ya” with the word God “El.” It is depicting the feminine and masculine nature of God or His role as a disciplinarian and as a loving parent. Indeed this book speaks of both the judgment of God in the catastrophic loss of their food supply through a locust invasion 1:1-2:17 and the promise of restoration 2:18-32.
The book is written in a poetic style and is meant to be an allegory as well as a description of actual events. There is debate as to whether such an event occurred in Judah and many scholars simply accept this as an allegory. Still, for us, the allegorical nature of this book allows us to make numerous personal applications to our own lives. The message is one which teaches that what God must allow to be removed from our lives to bring about correction, He will one day restore.
This is clearly the message of Joel 2:25 and many who are going through a time of loss have embraced this as a promise of future restoration. This loss occurred from an invasion of locust which devoured their crops. God also names the cankerworm or the inchworm which is the larva of a moth, the caterpillar which is the larva for the butterfly and the palmerworm which is the larva for a beetle. These insects are noted for their destruction of trees and other plant life.
A locust invasion of 2,500 years ago means little to me but I am all about spiritual applications and here is mine. The word locust comes from the root word ravah which literally means to multiply into a multitude. It is spelled Resh, Beth, and Hei. These letters and their order indicate that when a multitude of difficulties come upon us, it drowns out that still small voice of God. The cankerworm is yalak which is spelled Yod, Lamed, and Qop and literally means to lick or lap. These letters and their order indicate a loss of hope. The cankerworm literally licks away your hope. The caterpillar in Hebrew is chasel and means to devour. This is spelled Cheth, Samek, and Lamed and indicates fear. The caterpillar devours you with fear. The palmerworm in Hebrew is gazem which means to cut off. The word is spelled Gimmel, Zayin, and Mem and indicates sorrow or grief. The palmerworm is pictured as filling you with grief and cutting you off from the joys of life.
God is promising in this verse that he will restore us. The word restore is the word shalom meaning peace. However, there is a wide range of usages for the word shalom other than peace. The word is used to describe peace, completeness, healing, restoration, and retribution or repayment among a few of its usages. He will restore the years that these insects have destroyed. The word years is shanah which literally means to repeat, to change, to disfigure, or to alter. It can also mean “again and again.”
There is a literal meaning to this verse, which is that God will restore the land that the insects have destroyed. But I also detect a personal message in this verse. It is the reason why each insect is named. The enemy may use the locust against us and try to drown out the still small voice of God. He may send the cankerworm to discourage us and cause us to lose hope, or the caterpillar to devour us with fear and the palmerworm to fill us with such grief and sorrow that we are cut off from all the good that life has to offer. Yet, Joel prophesies that if we repent God will bring his shalom his restoration, peace, and healing to change all that was disfigured by the enemy.
I see you have some understanding of the order of Hebrew letters. Are you able to express that understanding to us?
The verse holds my heart through my journey through this valley of weeping.
I guess you already know that the definition of angel is messenger. You are my angel today from God. Over the past several days we have met extreme sadness and devistestation. In the town of Paradise, California (and surrounding areas) fire came in a huge wind and wiped out the entire town. 153,336 acres. 81 civilian fatalities. 13,503 residences destroyed. As you can imagine, this is more sadness than we could all hope to deal with. So many displaced. A lot of memories gone in homes most grew up in. My relationship with Jesus has always felt pretty strong until this happened. I could not stop crying in my grief. So hard to watch so many suffering. I prayed and prayed that God would give me an answer to this. My husband is not a believer and he said he could understand the wonderful things that were happening as a result because he saw people with huge hearts just giving and giving to help. But he said, “Why would God allow this?” All I could say was, “Honey, God did not start this fire.” My husband asked, “Why would He allow this to go so far?” This lesson was just what I needed to hear. We are all such sinners and I realize that to get our attention God has to allow these circumstances. Maybe we will learn and grow ~ closer to Him that loves us more than we will ever know. On top of all this a very good friend was in a car accident and fractured her neck in a few places and had to have surgery. This happened just before the fire. As a result of the fire she lost everything she has. She says she thinks God is testing her. I don’t like the way that sounds. I just know my friend loves her LORD. I am thinking she thinks she had done something wrong. I wonder how many others are feeling that way too. I just know our God is good. I have to hang my hat on that, keep my relationship with him and pray for healing.
Wow, loved this one! Very cool and super applicable. This has been a favorite verse of mine for years….