Matthew 16-23

Mid-levelBusy pastors, General readers, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation
Last updated: November 20, 2025
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Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.6/10

Clear, reliable exposition of Matthew 16–23 that serves preachers with conviction, clarity, and pastoral warmth.

Publication Date(s): 1988
Pages: 336
ISBN: 9780802407697
Faithfulness to the Text: 9/10
MacArthur consistently honours the plain sense of Matthew’s text, offering exposition rooted in grammatical and historical context.
Christ Centredness: 8/10
Christ’s identity, authority, and mission are clearly emphasised, especially in passages like the transfiguration and Peter’s confession.
Depth of Insight: 8/10
While not technical, the commentary offers thoughtful insight into themes of discipleship, authority, and judgment.
Clarity of Writing: 9/10
The writing is exceptionally clear and structured, making complex passages readily understandable for teachers and learners.
Pastoral Usefulness: 9/10
A strong resource for shaping sermons and lessons, providing direct application and pastoral clarity throughout.
Readability: 9/10
Engaging, concise, and easy to follow; ideal for repeated use in preparation or devotional study.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
336 pages
Type
Expositional, Expository (Mid-Level)
Theo. Perspective
Baptist, Broadly Evangelical, Reformed
Overall score
8.6 / 10
Strength
A well-organised and convictional exposition that keeps Matthew’s major themes clear, providing pastors with steady help for preaching Christ’s identity, mission, and call to discipleship.
Limitation
The commentary seldom interacts with broader academic discussion, and certain sections would benefit from additional historical or theological nuance.

In this volume on Matthew 16–23, John MacArthur continues his steady, verse-by-verse exposition of the Gospel narrative at a pivotal moment in Jesus’ ministry. These chapters contain Peter’s confession, Jesus’ declaration of the church, the transfiguration, escalating conflict with Israel’s leaders, and the solemn woes pronounced upon the scribes and Pharisees. MacArthur approaches each passage with a focus on authorial intent, straightforward explanation, and strong pastoral application.

We find his work designed primarily for teachers and preachers who value clarity, doctrinal stability, and faithful exposition. While the commentary is not technical, it offers dependable guidance for understanding the flow of Matthew’s argument and the theological weight of Jesus’ teaching in these chapters.

Why Should I Own This Commentary?

We appreciate the commentary’s ability to give a clear and organised explanation of the text without overwhelming detail. MacArthur writes for the ordinary expositor—someone who wants trustworthy interpretation, accessible explanation, and consistent application. His handling of the Church’s foundation in Matthew 16, the transfiguration, and Jesus’ climactic engagement with the Pharisees is crisp, pastoral, and anchored in historic evangelical conviction.

We also value the way he integrates doctrine with exposition. Themes such as the Messiah’s identity, the cost of discipleship, the nature of true righteousness, and Jesus’ authority over Israel’s leadership are treated with seriousness and conviction. His exposition of the woes in Matthew 23 is especially strong—full of pastoral urgency and clear doctrinal reflection.

For sermon preparation, this volume offers a reliable scaffold. It will not replace more technical works, but it will sharpen outlines, clarify difficult verses, and help preachers bring the text to bear on the hearts of their people with clarity and weight.

Closing Recommendation

We warmly commend this volume to pastors, Bible teachers, and small-group leaders who want faithful, conservative, expositionally driven help in navigating Matthew’s middle chapters. It is doctrinally sound, steady in its interpretation, and written with the heart of a pastor.

While it is best used alongside more technical or academic works for detailed study, it remains a strong and trustworthy companion for preparing sermons or leading Bible studies through Matthew 16–23.


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Classification

  • Level: Mid-level
  • Best For: Busy pastors, General readers, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Strong recommendation

Reviewed by

An Expositor

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