By Pastor Paul Liburd
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July 11, 2026
God Can Restore the Years the Locusts Have Eaten By Pastor Paul Liburd | Handsworth Seventh-day Adventist Church "I will restore to you the years that the locusts have eaten." — Joel 2:25 I want to encourage you today with one simple but life-changing truth: God can restore. What have you lost? Have you lost opportunities, relationships, money, your health, or what you consider to be your best years? Perhaps you've lost your faith, your hope, or even your sense of purpose. Most of us carry regrets. We look back and think, If only I could do that again. If only I could turn back the clock. We imagine making different choices, saying different words, or taking a different path. Yet God gives us a wonderful promise that speaks directly into our losses and regrets. In Joel 2:25 He declares: "I will restore to you the years that the locusts have eaten." The Meaning Behind the Promise To appreciate the power of this promise, we need to understand what it meant to those who first heard it. Joel was speaking to an agricultural society whose livelihood depended entirely upon the harvest. Imagine spending months ploughing, sowing, and tending your fields, only to see a swarm of locusts descend. Within hours, an entire year's labour could disappear. Green fields became barren wastelands, and every hope for the future seemed lost. The devastation was overwhelming. Many of us understand that feeling—not because we've experienced literal locusts, but because circumstances have consumed years of our lives. Perhaps it was a failed relationship, poor decisions, addiction, illness, rebellion, or years spent pursuing the wrong priorities. Looking back, those years can feel wasted—years we can never recover. How often have you wished you could simply start again? The wonderful news of Joel 2:25 is this: Although we cannot turn back the clock, God can still restore. He can bring blessing where there has been loss, fruitfulness where there has been barrenness, and purpose where there has only been regret. The Locusts Were Not Outside God's Control There is, however, something in Joel's prophecy that many people overlook. God describes the locusts as: "My great army which I sent among you." (Joel 2:25) Think about that. The locusts were not outside God's control. God Himself says, "I sent them." Why would a loving God do such a thing? Because His people had drifted away from Him. They were travelling a path that would ultimately destroy them, and in His mercy God interrupted their journey. The locusts were not evidence that God had abandoned His people—they were evidence that He loved them enough to discipline them. He disrupted their plans so they would stop, reflect, and return to Him. The locusts were never intended to be the end of the story. They were a wake-up call. When God Uses Hardship Perhaps that speaks to your own life. Maybe you've experienced your own "locusts"—a painful disappointment, a devastating failure, financial loss, illness, broken relationships, or doors that unexpectedly closed. You may still wonder why those things happened. Could it be that God was using those painful circumstances to draw your attention back to Him? Throughout Scripture we see that God's discipline is never intended to destroy His children but to restore them. The purpose of the locusts was repentance. The purpose was renewal. The purpose was restoration. If God had continued blessing His people while they walked away from Him, those blessings would simply have enabled their rebellion. Instead, He lovingly interrupted their lives so they might return. Restoration Follows Repentance In Joel's message, restoration always follows repentance. The God who sent the warning is the same God who promised restoration. The God who allowed the interruption is the same God who offers hope for the future. And He offers that same hope today. Perhaps you look back and see wasted years. God says, "I can restore." Perhaps you see failure. God says, "I can restore." Perhaps you've wandered far from Him. God says, "Return to Me." The message of Joel is not merely that God restores years. It is that God restores people. When w e return to Him, we discover that His grace is greater than our failures, greater than our mistakes, and greater than anything the locusts have consumed. Can God Really Restore the Years? The answer is a resounding yes. There is nothing God cannot do. God can make your latter years so fruitful that the losses of the former years no longer define you. He can fill your life with such blessing, purpose, fruitfulness, and joy that you stop measuring life by what you have lost and begin rejoicing in what He has given. We know God is able. But perhaps you're asking another question: Will God do it for me? The good news is that Scripture answers that question. God's promise of restoration is connected to repentance. The locusts came because the people turned away from God. Restoration came when they turned back. God's invitation is wonderfully simple: "Return to Me, and I will bless you." That same principle still applies today. If you repent and return to God, He will begin His work of restoration in your life. The choice is yours. You can continue down your own path, or you can turn back to God. You can continue carrying your regrets, or you can place them into the hands of the One who restores. So the question is not whether God can restore. The question is whether you are willing to repent and return. A Prayer Heavenly Father, You have seen every mistake, every missed opportunity, and every moment of rebellion in my life. Yet You do not define me by my past. Today I repent and turn back to You. Please forgive me, receive me, and begin Your work of restoration in my life. Restore what sin has damaged. Restore what circumstances have stolen. Restore my joy, my hope, my purpose, and my walk with You. Thank You that Your grace is greater than my failures and Your mercy is new every morning. I pray this in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.