The Book Of Psalms

AdvancedAdvanced students / scholars, Busy pastors, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
Last updated: February 17, 2026
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Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.2/10

A first-rate one-volume Psalms commentary combining textual fidelity, theological seriousness and pastoral usefulness.

Publication Date(s): 2014
Pages: 1051
ISBN: 9780802824936
Faithfulness to the Text: 9/10
The commentary consistently honours the Hebrew text, uses transliteration, engages textual variants (including Dead Sea Scrolls), and gives a fresh translation rooted in original language concerns.
Christ Centredness: 7/10
The authors rarely press Christian typological or messianic readings; their focus is on the Psalms in their own canonical and ancient Israelite context, which preserves textual integrity though limits New Testament application.
Depth of Insight: 8/10
The volume engages canonical shaping, poetic form, textual history and theology of the Psalter, offering substantial background insight though sacrificing exhaustive technical detail on longer psalms.
Clarity of Writing: 9/10
Their prose is accessible, with transliteration replacing Hebrew where possible, footnotes managing the technicalities, and main text flowing smoothly for pastors who do not read Hebrew.
Pastoral Usefulness: 8/10
Excellent for sermon preparation and Bible-teaching; gives robust grounding in meaning before application, though application must be drawn by the preacher rather than provided by the authors.
Readability: 8/10
Despite its size, the layout (translation, notes, commentary) remains navigable, and most entries are digestible in a single sitting — a real asset for busy pastors.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
1051 pages
Type
Academic, Exegetical (Technical), Expository (Mid-Level)
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical, Reformed
Overall score
8.2 / 10
Strength
Faithful to Hebrew and canon, great for truly understanding each psalm before preaching.
Limitation
Not a devotional or Christ-centred exposition; occasional brevity on long or complex psalms.

This Psalms volume in the New International Commentary on the Old Testament, by Nancy L DeClaissé-Walford, Rolf A Jacobson and Beth LaNeel Tanner, gives us a serious and detailed walk through the whole Psalter. Each psalm is introduced with its own fresh English translation, notes on key textual questions, and careful comments on structure, imagery and movement of thought. The authors are attentive to Hebrew poetry, parallelism and the shaping of the book as a whole, so we are helped to see not just favourite verses but the argument of each psalm.

We are dealing here with scholars who are comfortable with the world of academic discussion and critical questions, yet they write in a way that pastors and thoughtful Bible teachers can still follow. They work steadily from the text outward, giving historical, literary and theological observations that shed light on what the psalmist is actually saying. The tone is measured, not speculative, and there is a clear desire to hear the psalms on their own terms before we rush to use them.

That said, this is not a strongly confessional or explicitly Reformed reading of the Psalter. The authors make good and regular use of historical-critical tools, and they tend to be modest and restrained when it comes to tracing lines forward to Christ. As long as we know that, this can sit very fruitfully alongside more explicitly conservative and Christ centred Psalms resources.

Why Should I Own This Commentary?

For preachers, this commentary offers a reliable foundation when you are working through a psalm and want to be sure you have really understood the text. The translation is thoughtful, the comments are rooted in the Hebrew even when the script itself is not on the page, and difficult phrases are given patient attention. When you are staring at an obscure image or a puzzling line, you will usually find that the authors have at least mapped the options and given reasons for their preferred reading.

Another strength is the way the book treats the Psalter as an intentionally shaped collection. The authors highlight superscriptions, editing seams, the five book structure and recurring themes. For the working preacher, that helps you avoid preaching each psalm as a stand alone hymn and instead see patterns across clusters of psalms, movements in the book and the big theological currents that run from Psalm 1 to Psalm 150. That is especially valuable if you are planning a series and want to know how individual psalms hang together.

At the same time, this is not a homiletical commentary that hands you outlines and illustrations. The authors rarely press into explicit application, and they are quite restrained in drawing explicit connections to the Lord Jesus and the life of the church. As Reformed preachers we will want to do more work to connect exegesis to Christ centred proclamation and to the life of the local congregation. Used with that expectation, this volume serves as a solid exegetical base on which better preaching can be built.

Closing Recommendation

If you are looking for one serious, modern volume on Psalms that will help you handle the text with care, this NICOT contribution is well worth owning. It is especially useful for pastors and students who want to grapple with the Hebrew text and with questions about the shape and theology of the Psalter, but who still need writing that is clear enough to use in week to week preparation.

We would not lean on it alone for Christ centred preaching or for clear doctrinal anchoring, yet as an exegetical companion it is a strong and helpful resource. Placed alongside more explicitly Reformed and pastoral works on the Psalms, it can make a valuable contribution to a well rounded preaching library.

As pastoral next steps, we can visit the Bible Book Overview, browse Top Recommendations, and use the Reformed Commentary Index to build a wiser working library.

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Classification

  • Level: Advanced
  • Best For: Advanced students / scholars, Busy pastors, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Strong recommendation

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