Summary
This volume takes two closely linked books and treats them as a single narrative arc, without flattening their distinct emphases. Ezra highlights the rebuilding of worship and identity around the Word of God, while Nehemiah presses the same covenant concerns into the ordinary work of rebuilding a city and reforming community life. The commentary keeps the reader moving through the text, showing how repeated patterns, lists, prayers, and public readings carry theological weight. The author is attentive to how exile and return reshape the people of God, and he helps the preacher hold together historical specificity with abiding relevance.
The writing style aims for clarity, and the discussion typically begins with careful explanation of the passage before drawing out themes that can be carried into preaching. There is a steady emphasis on the way Scripture forms a community, not merely individuals. That makes the book useful for pastors who are preparing sermons for congregations facing the pressures of compromise, fatigue, or disappointment. At the same time, the commentary does not treat Ezra and Nehemiah as a church manual. It keeps returning to the Lord who preserves a remnant, renews worship, and summons His people to repentance and perseverance.
Strengths
The best strength is the way the author handles structure. Ezra and Nehemiah can feel like a series of episodes stitched together with lists and administrative details. Here, those details are shown to be part of the story of restoration, and the commentary helps you see how covenant renewal depends on ordinary fidelity. The treatment of public reading, confession, and reform is especially strong, and it encourages preaching that is both doctrinal and concrete.
Another strength is the attention given to leadership and community dynamics. The book does not romanticise either leader. It shows how zeal, prayer, courage, and practical wisdom can coexist with sharp confrontation and imperfect outcomes. That balance gives the preacher categories for speaking honestly about ministry realities, without turning the text into a mere leadership talk. The commentary also highlights the role of opposition and discouragement, helping readers trace how spiritual conflict often emerges around worship, holiness, and the rebuilding of a distinct identity.
It is also helpful in connecting themes across Scripture without forcing the text. Return from exile is presented as real renewal and yet incomplete, leaving readers longing for a deeper restoration. That prepares the way for reading these books within the larger storyline of redemption, and it can be preached with confidence that the text itself presses toward hope beyond the immediate setting.
Limitations
Because the volume aims to serve preachers, some technical questions receive lighter treatment. Readers wanting sustained engagement with every debated historical issue, or extended interaction with a wide range of scholarship, may find the discussion selective. That is not a flaw so much as a trade off. It keeps the main lines clear, but it may leave advanced students needing a more specialised companion.
The pastoral application is present, but it sometimes comes through in broad strokes rather than in sharply worked examples. If you prefer a commentary that consistently offers tightly phrased sermon moves, illustrative angles, or homiletical outlines, you may need to supply more of that work yourself. The book gives you strong exegetical footing and theological direction, but it does not always step all the way into sermon crafting.
How We Would Use It
We would use this as a primary sermon preparation companion for Ezra and Nehemiah, especially when preaching through the narrative as a whole. It is well suited to help you locate each passage within the larger flow, then to identify the theological burdens the text carries. We would keep a more technical volume nearby for contested historical details or broader critical debates, but we would rely on this book to keep preaching shaped by the text rather than by side issues.
We would also use the commentary for small group leaders and ministry trainees who need help seeing why these books matter. The emphasis on communal formation, worship renewal, and perseverance under pressure is a good fit for discipling leaders who are learning to handle Scripture responsibly.
Closing Recommendation
A strong mid level commentary that helps Ezra and Nehemiah feel like living Scripture rather than an administrative appendix to the Old Testament. It is clear, text driven, and pastor friendly. If you are preaching these books, this belongs near the top of your working stack.
Gary Edward Schnittjer
Gary Edward Schnittjer is a contemporary North American evangelical scholar, writing from a broadly evangelical position.
He is best known for helping readers trace biblical theology across the canon, bringing clarity to how major themes develop from Genesis to Revelation. His work serves students and pastors who want to read the Bible as one unified story without losing the grain of each passage.
His writing remains valued for its accessible structure, careful summaries, and steady concern for the needs of the church. He is at his best when he connects the details of the text to the wider storyline of redemption with a clear, teachable voice.
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical