Passage
Lament like a virgin girded with sackcloth for the husband of her youth.
Lament like a virgin girded with sackcloth for the husband of her youth.
Joel 1:6 For a nation is come up upon my land, strong, and without number; his teeth are the teeth of a lion, and he hath the jaw-teeth of a lioness.
Joel 1:7 He hath laid my vine waste, and barked my fig-tree: he hath made it clean bare, and cast it away; the branches thereof are made white.
Joel 1:8 Lament like a virgin girded with sackcloth for the husband of her youth.
Joel 1:9 The meal-offering and the drink-offering are cut off from the house of Jehovah; the priests, Jehovah`s ministers, mourn.
Joel 1:10 The field is laid waste, the land mourneth; for the grain is destroyed, the new wine is dried up, the oil languisheth.
The verse centers on "lament", "like", "virgin", "girded", "sackcloth", "husband", and "youth". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "lament" and "like", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 7's "He hath laid my vine waste and..." into verse 9's "The meal-offering and the drink-offering are cut...", so "lament" and "like" belong inside that flow. In Joel context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "lament" and "like" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.