Genesis

AdvancedBusy pastorsUseful supplement
Publisher: Eerdmans
Theological Perspective: Broadly Evangelical
Resource Type: Commentary

Evaluation

Overall Score: 7.9/10

Publication Date(s): 2008
Pages: 398
ISBN: 9780802827050
Faithfulness to the Text: 8.4/10
We found a consistent effort to stay with the narrative flow and to let theological conclusions rise from what the text actually says. Where questions are complex, the tone remains careful rather than speculative.
Christ Centredness: 7.6/10
The commentary is strongest at tracing canonical themes that later converge in Christ, rather than forcing quick messianic readings. We would still want to add our own clear lines into fulfilment when preaching.
Depth of Insight: 8.3/10
There is real payoff in the theological synthesis and in the way key themes are gathered across the book. It often helps us see familiar passages with fresh seriousness.
Clarity of Writing: 7.7/10
The writing is generally clear but can become dense when theological discussion thickens. With steady reading it remains accessible to trained pastors.
Pastoral Usefulness: 7.8/10
It serves sermon preparation best at the planning stage and when working out themes across Genesis. For immediate application and outline building, it may need supplementing.
Readability: 7.5/10
The pace is measured and academic enough to require attention, but the tone is constructive. Most pastors will find it readable in purposeful sections.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
398 pages
Type
Exegetical (Technical)
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
7.9 / 10

Genesis is the book of beginnings, not only for the world, but for the people of God and the shape of biblical faith. This volume sits within the Two Horizons Old Testament Commentary, so it aims to do more than explain the text, it seeks to bring exegesis and theology into a single act of listening. We are helped to keep our feet in the narrative while also tracing the doctrinal weight that presses out from it.

We found the commentary most useful when it slows us down enough to read Genesis as crafted Scripture, not as a set of detached episodes. The early chapters are handled with attention to their inner logic and their theological claim. From there, the patriarchal narratives are treated as a sustained story of promise, faith, and providence, rather than as moralised portraits. The result is a reading that invites preachers to preach the text as covenant history that reveals the living God.

The work also encourages us to keep the whole book in view. Genesis is not merely a preface to the rest of the Bible, it is already a theological world, with themes of creation, blessing, curse, seed, land, and family that echo through Scripture. We appreciated the way the volume repeatedly returns to those threads, then helps us ask how they shape preaching that is both faithful to Genesis and alert to the wider canon.

Strengths

We value the way the commentary keeps the narrative moving. Genesis can tempt us into over focusing on details while losing the flow of the story. Here, the big turns of the book are kept in front of us, so the preacher can see where a passage sits in the larger argument, and why it matters.

There is also a welcome insistence that theology must arise from the text. The best parts of the volume model a steady movement from literary and contextual observation into doctrinal reflection. That is particularly helpful in Genesis, where the foundational themes can become slogans if they are not anchored to the actual scenes, speeches, and patterns of the narrative.

Pastorally, the commentary tends to encourage patience. It helps us sit with unresolved tensions, such as the persistence of sin after judgement, the mixture of faith and fear in the patriarchs, and the often hidden providence of God. That tone serves preaching well because Genesis does not rush to tidy endings, it teaches the church to trust the God who keeps His promises across generations.

Limitations

This style of commentary can require time. It is less suited to last minute sermon preparation and more suited to careful planning, because it asks the reader to engage both the text and the theological questions that emerge from it.

At points, readers may wish for a more direct line into sermon shaping. The theological reflection is often stimulating, but it may need translation into simpler, more immediate preaching language. We also found that some discussions can feel dense, so a busy pastor may need to use it selectively rather than cover to cover.

How We Would Use It

We would use this volume early in a preaching series, when we are building our map of Genesis and deciding what to emphasise across the whole book. It can help us see the narrative arcs and the theological load bearing beams, which makes weekly work steadier and less reactive.

For a quick test of a section, we would read the commentary on one paragraph we know well, then ask whether it clarifies the flow of thought, whether it keeps the passage in its immediate context, and whether the theological conclusions feel text driven rather than imported. If those three tests are met, we can lean on it with confidence.

We would also pair it with a more streamlined preaching commentary when time is tight. Let this series do the deep work of conceptual clarity, then let a more concise resource assist with structure and application.

Closing Recommendation

We recommend this as a serious companion for preaching Genesis, especially for pastors who want their theology to be built from careful reading of the narrative. It will reward those who read slowly and think hard, and it can help keep sermons both text faithful and theologically substantial.

Where to buy
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Classification

  • Level: Advanced
  • Best For: Busy pastors
  • Priority: Useful supplement

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