Online Commentaries DisclaimerThanks to Google and the ongoing efforts of hundreds of people in libraries around the world, more and more scholarly works for the late 19th and early 20th centuries are becoming available online. Biblical scholarship is one of the beneficiaries of this information explosion. You can now access many commentaries on each book of the Bible, including in-depth commentaries. Upper-level commentaries for the Old Testament are identified by "(Hebrew)" and those for the New Testament are identified by "(Greek)". This means that they refer to the Hebrew or Greek text, often without providing an accompanying English translation. If you don't know these languages, I would recommend that you study with an Hebrew-English interlinear for the Old Testament or a Greek-English interlinear for the New Testament. These commentaries might also make free use Latin, German, and French, other languages biblical scholars are presumed to know. Despite these challenges, you will find a much more detailed discussion, a weighing of alternatives, and a marshalling of evidence often lacking in the easier commentaries.
Most of the commentaries available are so old because their copyrights have expired, placing them in the public domain. Many of them, however, still have tremendous value. I recommend that you read the evaluations of C. H. Spurgeon, the great Victorian preacher, in his Commenting & Commentaries (1876). With a few notable exceptions like Our Man in Heaven, an exposition of Hebrews by Edward Fudge, as well as most of the InterVarsity Press series, more recent commentaries are not available online. You may purchase them however, as indicated at the end of the list for each book. If you need guidance for the more recent commentaries, you might want to purchase one of the following resources: Commentary & Reference Survey (2007) OT Commentary Survey (2007) NT Commentary Survey (2006). ©Copyright 2008 Steve Singleton | DeeperStudy.com | Online Commentaries Disclaimer |