Summary
We find Murphy’s Ecclesiastes a serious Word Biblical Commentary volume that serves careful preparation. It keeps us close to the passage, attending to structure, key terms, and the flow of argument so we can handle the text with greater honesty.
Because it is written for detailed work, it is strongest when we have time to study. It is less about ready made sermon outlines, and more about giving us the textual footing we need for faithful proclamation.
Why Should I Own This Commentary?
We should own this commentary when we want a technical companion that helps us slow down and read with discipline. It is particularly useful when a passage is disputed, dense, or easy to mishandle through hurried assumptions.
We also benefit when careful scholarship tests our instincts. Even where we do not follow every proposal, the work often strengthens our reasoning and sharpens our awareness of what the text actually says.
For Reformed preaching, the gain is often indirect. Strong exegesis supports clearer Christward proclamation, and it helps us serve the church with confidence rather than guesswork.
Closing Recommendation
We recommend this as a robust desk resource for pastors and students who want depth. It works best alongside a more directly expositional commentary that assists with sermon shape and application.
As pastoral next steps, we can read the Bible Book Overview, consult Top Recommendations, and browse the Reformed Commentary Index to build a wiser shelf.
Purchase here
Roland E. Murphy
Roland E. Murphy was an American twentieth century Old Testament scholar, writing from a Roman Catholic tradition with mainstream academic engagement.
He is known for work in wisdom literature, especially Ecclesiastes. His exposition helps readers face the book’s honesty about frustration, mortality, and the limits of human grasp, while still attending to its call to fear God. Used carefully, his work can strengthen clear preaching that neither dodges the tension nor loses the text’s God centred conclusion.
He remains valued for clarity and steady handling of a difficult book.
Recommended titles include Ecclesiastes in Word Biblical Commentary, The Tree of Life, and Wisdom Literature.
Theological Perspective: Non-Evangelical/Critical