Evaluation
Overall Score: 4.3/10
Summary
At a Glance
- Length
- 888 pages
- Type
- Academic
- Theo. Perspective
- Non-Evangelical / Critical
- Overall score
- 4.3 / 10
Carroll offers a very large and strongly critical commentary on Jeremiah, shaped by close attention to composition, redaction, and the complex formation of the book. The work often challenges traditional assumptions, emphasising the layered nature of the text and the ideological forces that may have shaped its final form. As a result, the commentary can feel less like a guide for reading Jeremiah as Scripture and more like an extended investigation into how Jeremiah became the book we have.
For advanced academic readers, this can be stimulating and at times illuminating. For pastors, the method raises significant questions about how best to use the volume. It may provide background and detailed discussion of textual issues, but it rarely offers the kind of canonical, church facing exposition that preaching requires.
Strengths
The sheer scope of the commentary means that many difficult passages are addressed in depth. If you need awareness of critical debates, or if you are trying to understand why Jeremiah is such a contested text, Carroll provides extensive engagement. There is also a careful eye for rhetoric and for the political and social pressures that surround prophetic proclamation, which can help readers see why Jeremiah words cut so sharply and why resistance was fierce.
Used cautiously, the book can sharpen your awareness of complexity and keep you from glib readings of judgement and hope.
Limitations
The limitations are substantial for confessional preaching. The sceptical posture toward authorial unity and toward traditional readings can reshape the theological message in ways that will not sit easily with evangelical convictions about Scripture. There is little emphasis on Jeremiah as a coherent prophetic witness within the canon, and little attempt to move toward Christian fulfilment. Pastors who consult the volume must be clear about their own commitments, and must test claims rigorously against the text and the wider canonical storyline.
The book is also enormous, making it difficult to use efficiently in weekly preparation.
How We Would Use It
We would not use Carroll as a primary preaching resource. If consulted at all, it would be for awareness of critical issues, textual questions, and interpretative disputes, and only after a solid reading of Jeremiah within the canon. For sermon work, we would prioritise resources that treat Jeremiah as Scripture for the church and that trace the path to Christ, new covenant hope, and faithful endurance under judgement.
Closing Recommendation
A major critical work that can inform advanced academic study, but its method and conclusions mean it should be handled with great care in the service of preaching. Best for specialists rather than pastors seeking a primary guide.
Classification
- Level: Advanced
- Best For: Advanced students / scholars
- Priority: Use with caution
Build your shelf for this Bible book
Top picks connected to this Bible book, plus a few trusted global staples.
Join the conversation.
Have you used this commentary in preaching or study? What did you find especially helpful, or where did you struggle?
Please keep discussion thoughtful, charitable, and focused on helping others serve Christ more faithfully in handling His Word.