Summary
This older Old Testament Library volume covers both Samuel books in a single academic treatment. It approaches the narratives with seriousness, moving through the rise of kingship, the tragedy of Saul, and the complex portrayal of David. The commentary is attentive to textual difficulties and to historical questions, and it often pauses to discuss how traditions may have been shaped. At the same time, it recognises that Samuel is not mere political history, it is theological narrative that interprets leadership under the Lord. The result is a substantial study resource that can still be useful, particularly for readers who want to think carefully about structure, theme, and the moral weight of the stories, even if some scholarship will feel dated.
Strengths
A key strength is the steady walk through the text. Samuel is long and emotionally varied, and the commentary helps readers keep sight of major arcs, the movement from faithful prayer to compromised leadership, the rise and fall of Saul, and the promise and failure bound up with David. It also takes the prophetic dimension seriously. Samuel presents the Word of God confronting kings and shaping the fate of the people, and this commentary frequently draws attention to that dynamic. Another strength is its willingness to wrestle with difficulty. Samuel contains moral complexity, violence, and dark consequences, and the commentary does not treat these as minor issues. For teachers and advanced students, it can be helpful to see interpretive options set out and to be reminded where the Hebrew text presses hard. Used well, this kind of careful engagement can keep preaching honest and can guard against turning David into a simple role model.
Limitations
The most obvious limitation is age. Some discussions reflect older critical categories and can sound dated in both method and conclusion. Pastors may also find that the commentary spends time on reconstruction that does not directly aid sermon preparation. Another limitation is the lack of explicit Christ centred trajectory. Samuel is thick with promise, covenant, and kingship, and it prepares the reader for a greater Son of David. This commentary will not naturally do that work for you. The preacher must trace the canonical line with clarity, showing how David both points forward and falls short, and how the promise of an enduring house finds fulfilment in Christ. Finally, because the style is scholarly, it does not often pause to help with pastoral application. It can inform the preacher, but it will not shape the sermon tone or help you anticipate congregational misunderstandings.
How We Would Use It
We would use this volume as a secondary academic voice. It can be valuable when a passage raises textual questions or when the narrative seems to contain tension. It can also be useful for series planning, because it keeps both books in view and helps trace themes across the whole story. In sermon preparation, we would pair it with more confessionally rooted resources. Our aim in Samuel is to preach the Lord as the true King and to show the failure of human kingship as a preparation for the true King. Saul exposes outward religion without obedience, and David exposes both the heights of faith and the depths of sin. The covenant promise of an enduring throne drives hope beyond David. From there we can proclaim Christ as the faithful King who obeys perfectly, bears judgement for covenant breakers, and shepherds his people in righteousness.
Closing Recommendation
A substantial older academic commentary that still offers careful engagement with Samuel and serious attention to kingship themes. Use it for depth and problem solving, but test its assumptions and pair it with resources that will help you preach Samuel as Christian Scripture that leads to Christ.
Hans Wilhelm Hertzberg
Hans Wilhelm Hertzberg was a German Lutheran Old Testament scholar of the mid twentieth century.
He is best known for his commentaries on Samuel and Kings, where he combined historical criticism with a concern for the theological message of the text. Writing in the aftermath of the Second World War, he sought to read the historical books as witnesses to faith amid judgement and renewal.
Hertzberg remains valued for clarity, theological sensitivity, and a serious engagement with the canonical shape of Israel history. His work reflects Lutheran roots, yet it continues to serve pastors and students who want historically aware exposition that does not lose sight of the theological centre.
Theological Perspective: Lutheran