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Joel 2:30

And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and pillars of smoke.
All Commentaries on Joel 2:30 Go To Joel 2

Maximus of Turin

AD 423
The people, then, call this day “the new sun,” and although they say that it is new, yet they also show that it is old. This world’s sun—which undergoes eclipse, is shut out by walls and is hidden by clouds—I would call old. I would call old the sun that is subject to vanity, is fearful of corruption and dreads the judgment. For it is written, “The sun will be changed into darkness and the moon into blood.” Old, indeed, would I call that which is implicated in human crimes, does not flee adulteries, does not turn aside from murder and, although it does not wish to be in the midst of the human race when some offense is perpetrated, stands here alone among all the evil deeds. Therefore, inasmuch as it has been shown to be old, we have discovered that nothing is new but Christ the Lord, of whom it is written, “The Sun of justice will rise upon you” and of whom the prophet also says in the person of sinners, “The sun has not risen upon us, and the light of justice has not shone upon us.” For when the whole world was oppressed by the darkness of the devil and the gloom brought on by sin was laying hold of the world, at the last age—that is to say, when night had already fallen—this sun deigned to bring forth the rising of his birth. At first, before the light—that is, before the Sun of justice shone—he sent the oracle of the prophets as a kind of dawning, as it is written: “I sent my prophets before the light.” But afterwards he himself burst forth with his rays—that is, with the brightness of his apostles—and shed upon the earth a light of truth such that no one would stumble into the devil’s darkness.
2 mins

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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