Summary
This Old Testament Library commentary on Ezra and Nehemiah is an academic resource that reads these books in their post exilic setting, with close attention to historical context, composition, and theological themes. Ezra and Nehemiah combine narrative, lists, official letters, and reform accounts, and this commentary aims to explain how those elements work together to portray restoration under pressure. It highlights leadership, worship, covenant renewal, and the hard questions of identity that the community faced as it rebuilt temple life and city walls. The work is scholarly and often detailed, offering background that can help readers avoid anachronism and simplistic application. It is not a preaching manual, but it can equip pastors and teachers who want to handle these texts with accuracy and seriousness.
Strengths
A major strength is the careful attention to setting. Ezra and Nehemiah make more sense when the reader understands the realities of return, opposition, imperial power, and internal weakness. The commentary helps paint that picture and shows why the reforms mattered. It also helps readers take lists seriously. Instead of treating genealogies and registries as filler, it explains how they serve identity formation and covenant continuity. Another strength is the handling of major theological moments, public reading of the Law, confession of sin, covenant commitments, and the pattern of reform. These themes can support faithful preaching that calls the church to serious worship and repentance. The commentary also brings thoughtful engagement to difficult passages, where modern readers may stumble over issues of separation, communal boundaries, and the cost of reform. Even if a pastor does not adopt every conclusion, the careful framing can help one teach with humility and clarity.
Limitations
The central limitation is the critical approach to composition and reconstruction. At times the commentary gives significant attention to sources and development, which can be useful academically but can distract from the canonical voice that preaching must proclaim. Pastors will need to sift carefully, choosing what aids understanding of the passage in front of them. Another limitation is the lack of explicit Christ centred fulfilment. Ezra and Nehemiah show that external rebuilding cannot finally renew the heart. The people promise, reform, and organise, yet the deeper problem of sin remains. Christian preaching should press that tension toward the need for the new covenant and the greater restoration in Christ. This commentary does not naturally provide that movement. Finally, it offers limited direct help with sermon shaping, application, and pastoral tone. The preacher must do that work, helping a congregation hear these books as living Scripture for the church.
How We Would Use It
We would use this commentary for background, for series planning, and for tricky passages where historical setting and textual detail matter. It is especially useful when a passage includes lists, official documents, or reform measures, because those sections benefit from careful explanation. In preaching, we would keep the main aim clear, to show Gods call to holiness and worship, and to expose the limits of human effort without heart renewal. Ezra and Nehemiah teach perseverance in rebuilding, courage under opposition, and seriousness about the Word. Yet they also reveal that lasting faithfulness cannot be secured by external order alone. From there we can proclaim Christ, who brings cleansing, writes the Law on the heart by the Spirit, and builds his church as a holy dwelling place. The commentary can sharpen exegesis, but the gospel trajectory must be built from the canon.
Closing Recommendation
A serious academic commentary with strong historical grounding and careful attention to the shape of Ezra and Nehemiah. Use it for advanced study and clarity on difficult texts, but pair it with confessionally rooted resources so preaching can move from post exilic reform to the deeper renewal found in Christ.
Joseph Blenkinsopp
Joseph Blenkinsopp was an Irish scholar of the modern era, working within mainstream academic and often critical study of the Old Testament.
He is known for major work on Isaiah, with careful attention to composition, context, and themes. His scholarship can illuminate historical setting and literary development, though we will want to read with discernment and maintain a clear commitment to Scripture’s canonical unity and prophetic witness to Christ.
He remains valued for range of learning and sustained engagement across large prophetic texts.
Recommended titles include Isaiah 1 to 39 in Word Biblical Commentary, Isaiah 40 to 55 in Word Biblical Commentary, and Isaiah 56 to 66 in Word Biblical Commentary.
Theological Perspective: Non-Evangelical/Critical