Robin A. Parry

Robin A. Parry is a British evangelical theologian and editor active in the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries.

He has contributed to Old Testament studies and theological reflection, and has been involved in editing significant evangelical volumes. He has also written on themes such as universal salvation and biblical theology, stimulating lively debate within the evangelical world.

Parry is valued for intellectual honesty and clarity of argument. Even where readers disagree with his conclusions, his work models careful reasoning and a serious desire to think biblically about difficult doctrinal questions.

Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical

Robin A. Parry

Robin A. Parry is a British evangelical theologian and editor active in the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries.

He has contributed to Old Testament studies and theological reflection, and has been involved in editing significant evangelical volumes. He has also written on themes such as universal salvation and biblical theology, stimulating lively debate within the evangelical world.

Parry is valued for intellectual honesty and clarity of argument. Even where readers disagree with his conclusions, his work models careful reasoning and a serious desire to think biblically about difficult doctrinal questions.

Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical

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Lamentations

Mid-levelBusy pastors, Lay readers / small groups, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
8.2
Bible Book: Lamentations
Publisher: Eerdmans
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical
Resource Type: Commentary

Summary

This Lamentations volume in the Two Horizons Old Testament Commentary series aims to help the church recover the biblical practice of lament. Lamentations is poetry forged in judgement, grief, and ruin. It teaches the people of God how to speak to the Lord when sin has brought devastation and when hope feels fragile. The commentary offers interpretative guidance through the poems and then explores their theological horizon, asking how lament shapes faith, repentance, and endurance.

The volume is attentive to the literary artistry of Lamentations, including its acrostic form and its shifting voices. It also highlights the theology of covenant judgement and mercy that runs through the book. Readers are helped to see how Lamentations holds together confession, protest, and hope, and how it provides language for the church in seasons of discipline, suffering, and national collapse.

Strengths

One strength is its seriousness about the text as Scripture for worship and pastoral care. Lamentations is often neglected because it feels too raw, too dark, or too difficult to apply. This commentary shows why the book is necessary. It gives permission to grieve, but it also refuses to let grief become godless despair. The poems are addressed to the Lord. Even protest is prayer. That is a vital lesson for the church, especially in a culture that either denies suffering or turns it inward.

Theological reflection is also well matched to the book. Lamentations raises questions about divine justice, human sin, corporate responsibility, and the nature of hope. The commentary helps readers speak carefully about judgement and mercy, avoiding both harshness and sentimentality. It highlights how hope in Lamentations is not optimism about circumstances, but a clinging to the character of God, even when his hand is heavy.

For preaching, the volume offers a pathway to handle lament without manipulation. It helps the preacher show the congregation that the Bible contains authorised language for sorrow, confession, and longing. It also encourages the church to practise lament as a form of faith, which can deepen compassion, patience, and repentance.

Limitations

As with many Two Horizons volumes, the focus is not on exhaustive technical detail. Those needing extensive discussion of Hebrew poetics, textual criticism, or scholarly debate will want a more technical commentary alongside it. The volume provides enough for most preaching and teaching situations, but it is not designed to be the final word on every linguistic question.

Another limitation is that lament is spiritually demanding. A commentary can guide, but it cannot remove the weight of the book. Some readers may find the pace slow or the themes heavy. Even so, that is part of the point. Lamentations teaches the church to stay present with grief before God.

How We Would Use It

We would use this volume for preparing sermons in a short series through Lamentations, perhaps in a season of congregational grief or cultural upheaval. It is also useful for training pastors and leaders in how to speak about suffering, judgement, and repentance with biblical categories rather than therapeutic clichés.

It can also support pastoral care. When visiting the bereaved, walking with those under discipline, or leading prayers in troubled times, Lamentations provides words. This commentary helps leaders use those words wisely, keeping them anchored in the Lord and shaped by hope in his mercy.

Closing Recommendation

If you want a commentary that will help you preach and pray Lamentations faithfully, this is a strong choice. It is theologically serious, pastorally sensitive, and honest about sorrow. Use it to recover lament as a normal practice of church life under the sovereign mercy of God.