Commentaries
Different Types of Commentaries
Sermonic Commentaries
- A printed or reworked sermon
- A printed or reworked sermon
Expositional Commentaries
- Not set up like a sermon but designed to convey information or explain what is difficult to understand
- Not set up like a sermon but designed to convey information or explain what is difficult to understand
Homiletical Commentaries
- Designed to help with sermon or lesson preparation
- Homiletics means the art of preparing sermons and preaching.
Application Commentaries
- Seek to help the pastor bring the text into conversation with the modern world
- Seek to help the pastor bring the text into conversation with the modern world
Expository Commentaries
- References to the original languages, when they occur, are sequestered to their own sections, and Greek or Hebrew words are transliterated
- Exposition means a comprehensive description and explanation of an idea or theory
Hybrid Commentaries
- Combine the features of an expositional commentary and an exegetical commentary
- These commentaries provide readers with a sustained exposition of given biblical books, and they also contain features that are exegetical in nature
- These commentaries will often be the core resources for sermon preparation for pastors with standard levels of seminary training.
Exegetical Commentaries
- These commentaries trace the structure of passages, sometimes providing a discourse analysis of each pericope, deal with textual variants, discuss lexical and grammatical matters, and survey different interpretive options in detail.
- The Greek or Hebrew text is printed and transliterations may or may not be provided.
Hebrew or Greek Handbooks
- Provide more detailed grammatical and syntactical help than a normal exegetical commentary would provide.
- Provide more detailed grammatical and syntactical help than a normal exegetical commentary would provide.
Theological Commentaries
- Provide more attention to the theological themes of the books under consideration.
- Some of these commentaries come in two parts: an abbreviated exposition of the book, section-by-section, and an expanded survey of the major theological themes found in or raised by the book.
Socio-Rhetorical Commentaries
- Focus on the social world that informs the biblical text and on the ancient forms of rhetoric which shape how a book is written.
- Focus on the social world that informs the biblical text and on the ancient forms of rhetoric which shape how a book is written.
Specialized Commentaries
- Focus on particular features rather than on expositing or exegeting books in their entirety.
- Some features include: historical and cultural background, geography, etc
Commentaries from Different Theological Perspectives
Lutheran
Reformed
Wesleyan
Baptist
Dispensationalist
Broadly evangelical
Non-evangelical
Recommended Commentaries
- John MacArthur
- Apologetics Study Bible
- Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament
- Word Biblical Commentary
- New International Greek Testament Commentary
- New International Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
- Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament
- Pillar New Testament Commentary