
A. MATTHEW HENRY'S COMMENTARY ON THE BIBLE, Hendrickson Publishers--
the best selling devotional commentary in history. And all packed into one volume with
small print. But Henry is worth the time spent reading him. He is devotional, warm, clear,
insightful, and preaches the passages to you. Henry was concerned that his readers have
a basic understanding of the text and were moved to apply it. He died after completing the
Book of Acts and other leading Puritan pastors were engaged to complete the commentary.
Though more modern commentaries have better Greek and Hebrew scholarship, none
surpass Matthew Henry in knowing or displaying Christ. A standard for 300+ years.
B. NEW BIBLE COMMENTARY (REVISED); Eerdmans--the best modern evangelical
commentary in one volume. As in any work where several authors are involved, their
contributions are uneven and vary in spiritual insight and scholarly quality. Still great.
B. NEW BIBLE COMMENTARY (21st Century Edition); InterVarsity--an updating of the
earlier, "revised" edition. Generally holds to the same level of scholarship and spirituality.
MULTI-VOLUME COMMENTARIES ON THE BIBLE
With more space to work with, these commentaries can deal with more Scripture and answer
more questions. Like any work of man, they are limited to the grace given to the author and
his diligence in making use of it.
A. MATTHEW HENRY'S COMMENTARY ON THE BIBLE, 6 Volumes, Hendrickson
Larger print with clearer type-face, this is the best edition of Matthew Henry available.
A. MATTHEW POOLE'S COMMENTARY ON THE BIBLE (3 Vol.), Banner of Truth--
A contemporary of Matthew Henry, Matthew Poole was also a godly and learned Puritan
pastor-scholar. While Matthew Henry preached each passage to his readers, Matthew Poole
stuck to a more straight-forward and concise commentary on the text. His words are reverent,
wise and to the point. As in the best commentaries, Poole gives interpretations other than his
own before explaining why he reached his conclusion on the text. Such a godly and useful
man as Charles Spurgeon said that if he could only have choice of commentary, and he already
had Matthew Henry, then it would be Matthew Poole.
A. JAMIESON, FAUSSET AND BROWN'S COMMENTARY ON THE BIBLE, by Robert
Jamieson, Andrew Fausset and David Brown; 3 Vol., Eerdmans--the 19th century equivalent
to Matthew Henry, this is a clear, warm and helpful set for Bible students. David Brown on
the Four Gospels and Andrew Fausset on Judges are especially good.
A. CROSSWAY CLASSIC COMMENTARY SERIES, 26 volumes; edited by Alister McGrath
and James Packer; Crossway (the best of the older commentaries by the best scholars such as
Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Owen, Matthew Henry, J. B. Lightfoot, Charles Spurgeon,
and Charles Hodge, are lightly edited, "abridged as needed, simplified stylistically, and
unburdened of foreign words". The creme of the crop of Bible commentaries updated for the
21st century.)
A. WELWYN COMMENTARY SERIES (The Bible Simply Explained), in process; Evangel-
ical Press--a delightful and truly helpful series of "practical, easy-to-understand expositions"
of the Word of God. Evangelical and Reformed pastors are doing the Body of Christ a great
service by their explanation and application of the various books of the Bible. (Note: The New
Testament commentaries on Galatians and 1st Corinthians are marred by a prior commitment
to antinomian theology and not up to the rest of the series.)