1 Kings

Mid-levelBusy pastorsStrong recommendation
Bible Book: 1 Kings
Publisher: Lexham Press
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical
Resource Type: Commentary
Last updated: February 20, 2026
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Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.1/10

Publication Date(s): 2025
Pages: 600
ISBN: 9781683598169
Faithfulness to the Text: 8.2/10
Handles narrative and covenant themes with care, keeping the text’s purpose in view.
Christ Centredness: 7.8/10
Supports responsible Christ centred preaching by clarifying the king and worship themes.
Depth of Insight: 8/10
Good theological and structural insight, without drifting into speculation.
Clarity of Writing: 8.3/10
Clear, serviceable prose that suits weekly preparation.
Pastoral Usefulness: 8.1/10
Strong for application on worship, compromise, and faithfulness under blessing.
Readability: 8.1/10
Accessible for a mid level commentary, suitable for regular consultation.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
600 pages
Type
Expository
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
8.1 / 10

First Kings is a book about the splendour and the fracture of the kingdom, and beneath that, about the faithfulness of the Lord and the unfaithfulness of His people. John N. Oswalt’s volume in the Evangelical Exegetical Commentary series aims to help us read the book as theology shaped history. We are shown the glory of Solomon, the building of the temple, the tragic drift into idolatry, and the eventual division that follows covenant compromise. It is a book that can preach with force to any church tempted to trade obedience for success.

This commentary serves pastors by keeping the narrative logic and covenant categories in view. The highs of Solomon’s wisdom and the temple dedication are not merely inspirational moments. They are covenant realities, the Lord giving rest, and the Lord placing His name. The lows are not merely political mistakes. They are spiritual betrayals, where the heart turns from the Lord to other loves. Oswalt helps us see that 1 Kings is not neutral reporting. It is calling for covenant loyalty, and it is warning that idolatry always comes with a cost.

The Elijah narratives then provide a sharp contrast. When the nation drifts, the Lord raises a prophet who confronts false worship and calls the people back to the living God. Oswalt helps us keep Carmel and its aftermath connected to the book’s wider argument. The question is not, can Elijah do miracles. The question is, who is God, and will Israel listen. That makes these chapters deeply relevant for a church living in a pluralistic age, yet the application must remain anchored in the text’s own emphasis.

Strengths

First, the commentary supports faithful sermon structure. Oswalt often clarifies how scenes hang together, where the narrative is moving, and why certain details are emphasised. That helps us avoid preaching 1 Kings as disconnected episodes. We can instead show the steady descent from glory to division, and then the Lord’s merciful interventions through prophetic ministry.

Second, there is a clear concern for theological coherence. The covenant promises to David, the role of the temple, and the meaning of wisdom are treated in ways that serve biblical theology. That is particularly useful in a book that can feel politically complex. Oswalt keeps reminding us that the real issue is worship and obedience, not mere statecraft.

Third, the writing is serviceable for pastors. It is not a quick devotional, but it is not impenetrable either. It gives enough engagement to strengthen confidence in the text, and it offers interpretive clarity on the passages most likely to raise questions.

Limitations

Those wanting a strongly confessional Reformed synthesis at every turn will need to supply that in their preaching, even though the commentary’s instincts are often compatible. Some sections may also leave you wanting more explicit guidance on bridging from Old Testament narrative to Christ centred proclamation. The material equips, but it expects the preacher to do the final homiletical work.

How We Would Use It

We would use this volume for series planning and for key theological chapters, particularly Solomon’s reign, the temple narratives, and the Elijah material. It can also help with discipleship teaching on idolatry, because it exposes the subtle ways compromise grows, often under the guise of wisdom and pragmatism.

In pastoral conversations, 1 Kings is a mirror for the church. When we are tempted to measure health by visible success, this book calls us to measure faithfulness by covenant loyalty. Oswalt’s commentary helps keep that message sharp and grounded.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend this as a useful mid level guide for preaching and teaching 1 Kings. It will help us keep the book’s covenant seriousness in view, and it will serve proclamation that aims to call God’s people back to true worship.

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Classification

  • Level: Mid-level
  • Best For: Busy pastors
  • Priority: Strong recommendation

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