Context: Joel prophesies to a Judah devastated by a locust plague (Joel 1:4) that he reads as a forerunner of "the day of the LORD, great and very awesome" (2:11). After the call to repentance grounded in the Name-formula — "Return to the LORD your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love" (Joel 2:13, citing Exodus 34:6) — Yahweh pivots from threatened judgment to promised restoration: agricultural reversal (2:18-27), Spirit outpouring (2:28-29), cosmic signs (2:30-31), and the climactic promise of 2:32: "And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved (וְהָיָה כֹּל אֲשֶׁר־יִקְרָא בְּשֵׁם יְהוָה יִמָּלֵט; LXX καὶ ἔσται πᾶς ὃς ἂν ἐπικαλέσηται τὸ ὄνομα κυρίου σωθήσεται). For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall be those who escape, as the LORD has said, and among the survivors shall be those whom the LORD calls" (Joel 2:32 / MT 3:5). The oracle is the pastoral climax of the Day-of-the-Lord passage: on a day of judgment so dreadful that "the sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood" (2:31), there is a single saving access — calling on Yahweh's Name.
Hebrew/Greek Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development: Joel 2:32 stands at a particular point in the canonical trajectory. Earlier "call on the Name" texts frame it within Israel's cultic and patriarchal piety: Abraham calls on the Name at Bethel (Genesis 12:8; 13:4) and Beersheba (21:33); the patriarchs establish altars and "call on the Name" as an act of worship (Genesis 26:25); Elijah at Carmel invokes "the name of the LORD" as the test between Yahweh and Baal (1 Kings 18:24, 36). The Psalter extends the theme: "I will call upon the LORD, who is worthy to be praised, and I shall be saved from my enemies" (Psalm 18:3); "I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the LORD" (Psalm 116:13); "Give thanks to the LORD, call upon his name" (Psalm 105:1; 1 Chronicles 16:8). Zephaniah anticipates a day when Yahweh will "change the speech of the peoples to a pure speech, that all of them may call upon the name of the LORD and serve him with one accord" (Zephaniah 3:9). Zechariah reaches a similar eschatological pitch: "They will call upon my name, and I will answer them. I will say, 'They are my people,' and they will say, 'The LORD is my God'" (Zechariah 13:9).
What Joel adds that none of these earlier texts articulates is the universal scope of the promise — "everyone (כֹּל) who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved." The earlier uses assume Israelite worshipers calling within Yahweh's covenant community. Joel 2:32 does not yet explicitly open the Name to the nations (that explicit universalism comes in Malachi 1:11 and Isaiah 66:18-21), but the absolute כֹּל (kōl, "all, every") creates the canonical warrant Peter and Paul will exploit at Pentecost and in Romans 10. The Joel oracle binds three elements that the earlier texts had held loosely: Day-of-the-Lord judgment, Spirit outpouring, and saving access through the Name — a triad that Luke deliberately structures Acts 2 around.
The Name-formula citation in Joel 2:13 deserves special attention. Immediately before the Spirit-and-salvation oracle, Joel grounds his call to repentance in Exodus 34:6: "Return to the LORD your God, for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love." This is canonically crucial: the Name invoked in Joel 2:32 is the Name proclaimed in Exodus 34, the Name whose content is merciful-gracious-ḥesed-faithful. Joel is not collapsing the Name into an abstract magical formula; he is specifying that the saving Name is the one whose character Yahweh disclosed at Sinai. To call on this Name is to appeal to the character that can both forgive sin and will by no means clear the guilty (Exodus 34:7). The dual-edged Name requires an atoning resolution — which is exactly what Pentecost Peter will proclaim (Acts 2:23, 36, 38).
Connections:
Christological Connection: Joel 2:32 is the load-bearing OT promise for this trajectory's transition from the Name restricted to Israel's cultus to the Name offered to all flesh in Christ. The connection operates primarily through Promise-Fulfillment, supported by Longitudinal Theme and Redemptive-Historical Progression.
By Promise-Fulfillment, Joel 2:32 is an explicit divine pledge: "it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved." Peter in Acts 2:17-21 reads the Pentecost event as the initial fulfillment: the Spirit-outpouring (Joel 2:28-29) has occurred, the first cosmic signs are emerging (Joel 2:30-31; cf. Acts 2:19-20), and therefore the climactic promise of 2:32 is now effective. Peter cites Joel verbatim in Acts 2:21 — "everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved" — and then the sermon's logic identifies that Lord: "Jesus of Nazareth, a man attested to you by God" (2:22); God "has made him both Lord and Christ" (2:36); therefore baptism "in the name of Jesus Christ" is offered for the forgiveness of sins (2:38). The κύριος of Joel's LXX (which rendered YHWH) is identified as Jesus. Paul extends the same argument in Romans 10:9-13: "If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord (κύριος) and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved… For 'everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved'" (10:9, 13). The OT promise that calling on YHWH's Name saves is fulfilled in calling on Jesus' Name — not because Jesus has replaced YHWH, but because Jesus is YHWH incarnate (cf. TT 046 Divine Identity).
By Longitudinal Theme, Joel 2:32 carries the Name-trajectory into its pastoral-invitational form. From Exodus 3's formal disclosure and Exodus 34's character-unpacking through the Deuteronomic Name-dwelling and the prophetic expansion, the Name has been progressively more accessible but still geographically and ethnically localized. Joel's כֹּל (kōl, "all, every") is the first explicit universal democratization. The Name that was spoken in one place (the bush), proclaimed in one covenant context (Sinai), deposited in one sanctuary (Deuteronomy 12), is now offered to "everyone" as a saving invocation. This anticipates Malachi 1:11's "from the rising of the sun to its setting my name will be great among the nations" and is actualized at Pentecost when Jerusalem is filled with representatives of every nation under heaven (Acts 2:5-11) who hear the Name proclaimed in their own languages.
By Redemptive-Historical Progression, Joel 2:32 marks the prophetic-promise stage of the arc. It does not yet deliver the promise — it speaks it into the canonical record, waiting to be taken up. The promise waits about 800 years until Peter stands up on the morning of Pentecost and says, "This is what was uttered through the prophet Joel" (Acts 2:16). The waiting itself is part of the redemptive-historical pattern: the Name-promise is secured in writing before the mechanism of fulfillment (the Name-above-every-name in the risen Jesus) is disclosed, so that when fulfillment comes it is visibly and demonstrably the answer to a specific prior word.
ANTI-DEFAULT CHECK: The primary method is Promise-Fulfillment — Joel 2:32 is a specific explicit promise with a specific explicit NT fulfillment (Acts 2:21; Romans 10:13), both cited verbatim. Longitudinal Theme is co-primary since the verse is a key stage in the Name-trajectory's canonical development (the universalizing turn). This is not typology: Joel 2:32 is not a type but a verbal promise; its fulfillment is not by analogical escalation but by direct citation and identification of the κύριος as Jesus.
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment (primary) — an explicit prophetic promise ("everyone who calls on the name of the LORD shall be saved") cited verbatim as fulfilled by Peter at Pentecost (Acts 2:21) and by Paul in Romans 10:13, both identifying the saving Name as Jesus' Name. Longitudinal Theme (co-primary) — the universalizing turn ("everyone") in the Name-trajectory from cultic-localized invocation to all-flesh saving access. Redemptive-Historical Progression — prophetic-promise stage grounding the Name-promise in the canonical record 800 years before its Pentecost fulfillment. NT References — Acts 2:21 and Romans 10:13 cite Joel 2:32 verbatim as fulfilled in Jesus.
Trajectory Table: 105 - Name of God (Revelation of Divine Character)