David Jackman

David Jackman (1942– ) is a British evangelical pastor, Bible teacher, and former president of the Proclamation Trust, known for shaping a generation of expositors through clear, text-driven preaching.

Jackman’s ministry spans local church leadership, theological training, and extensive work in expository preaching. He has written on pastoral ministry and biblical books with a distinctive concern for clarity, conviction, and faithfulness to the text. His work reflects a deep commitment to helping preachers understand both the message of Scripture and its application to the life of the church.

He is valued for warm, accessible writing that combines doctrinal depth with pastoral insight. His commentaries and training materials continue to equip pastors and lay leaders seeking preaching that is rooted in Scripture and centred on Christ.

Key titles include The Message of John’s Letters, Teaching Ephesians, and Opening Up the Bible.

David Jackman

David Jackman (1942– ) is a British evangelical pastor, Bible teacher, and former president of the Proclamation Trust, known for shaping a generation of expositors through clear, text-driven preaching.

Jackman’s ministry spans local church leadership, theological training, and extensive work in expository preaching. He has written on pastoral ministry and biblical books with a distinctive concern for clarity, conviction, and faithfulness to the text. His work reflects a deep commitment to helping preachers understand both the message of Scripture and its application to the life of the church.

He is valued for warm, accessible writing that combines doctrinal depth with pastoral insight. His commentaries and training materials continue to equip pastors and lay leaders seeking preaching that is rooted in Scripture and centred on Christ.

Key titles include The Message of John’s Letters, Teaching Ephesians, and Opening Up the Bible.

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The Message of John’s Letters

Mid-levelBusy pastors, Lay readers / small groups, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.9
Bible Book: 1 John 2 John 3 John
Publisher: IVP
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical Reformed
Resource Type: Commentary

Summary

The Message of John’s Letters is classic Bible Speaks Today: clear, careful exposition with a steady eye on the heart. David Jackman walks through 1, 2, and 3 John in sequence, tracing John’s concern for truth, love, obedience, and assurance. He helps us feel the pastoral pulse of an apostle who wants his readers to know that they really do belong to God and to keep walking in the light.

The commentary is not a technical treatment of the Greek but a sustained, text-driven explanation of the argument of the letters. Jackman handles key themes such as assurance, sin, antichrist, and love for the brothers with a reverent seriousness and a warm confidence in the authority of Scripture. Difficult phrases are faced honestly, yet always with an eye to how the passage should land in a congregation rather than in the seminar room alone.

Throughout, Jackman keeps the focus on the God who has first loved us in Christ. The letters’ searching tests of genuine Christian faith are never allowed to slip into introspective moralism. Again and again we are brought back to the cross, to the advocate we have with the Father, and to the Spirit’s witness that God has given us eternal life in his Son.

Why Should I Own This Commentary?

First, this is a genuinely preacher-friendly guide to John’s letters. Jackman thinks in units of thought that map very naturally onto sermons. Each section keeps together what belongs together in the text, highlights the main idea, and then works it out with clear headings and memorable turns of phrase. Busy pastors will find themselves moving from text to outline with very little friction.

Second, the theological instincts are those of a conservative, Reformed evangelical. The atonement, assurance, justification, new birth, and perseverance are all handled in a way that sits comfortably with classic Reformed convictions. Jackman is alert to false teaching in the text and in the contemporary church, but he warns without becoming shrill. The tone is steady, hopeful, and committed to the sufficiency of Scripture.

Third, the commentary shines in connecting John’s message to the realities of local church life. Questions of discernment, leadership, discipline, and love for awkward brothers and sisters are woven through the exposition. Elders, home group leaders, and student workers will all find rich help in applying the letters to messy, modern congregations where truth and love are often pulled apart.

The limits are worth noting. Readers looking for detailed interaction with scholarly debates, fine-grained syntactical issues, or comprehensive engagement with secondary literature will need to supplement this volume with a more technical work. Jackman occasionally moves quickly over controverted points where an advanced student might wish for more argumentation. But that is not what this book is trying to be, and it should not be judged for failing to be a different kind of commentary.

Closing Recommendation

For preachers and teachers working in 1, 2, or 3 John, The Message of John’s Letters is a very safe and very useful companion. It offers a faithful reading of the text, a strong Christ-centred emphasis, and plenty of help in bringing these searching letters to bear on contemporary churches. We gladly commend it as a primary mid-level resource, especially for those who want their study to lead naturally into preaching and pastoring.


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