The Book of Micah (NICOT) by James Nogalski

This volume picks up where his recent one on Joel, Obadiah and Jonah left off. The strengths and weaknesses are of necessity the same as he clearly worked on Micah at the same time. His Micah is on par with the best of that work (Joel).

His historical background section was my favorite of the Introduction. That time period is as fascinating as any novel could be and even covering the scholarly bases couldn’t diminish it. In unity of composition, authorship, and the text he goes scholarly to the hilt. You can imagine how that complicates conclusions. Both considering Micah among the Twelve and its relevance were better. He is quite expert on the Twelve and can plumb that line with ease. Structure, in my view, is weakly covered unless an outline is enough for you.

The commentary proper is what you’d expect, and what you’d want if the NICOT is a style you go for. Exegesis is nice. Scholarly issues deeply probed. Historical background expertly intwined. There’s some theology and, as usual, that may be a matter of taste.

If you want one major commentary, this will work fine. It’s newer and aware of what’s gone before. Theologically it’s in line with others in the series. Recommended.

I received this book free from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

Alexander Moody Stuart: A Memoir

I have long loved these gorgeous Banner of Truth biographies and this one stands out. Spurgeon spoke highly of Stuart and I can see why. I’ve even used a few of his commentaries and they strike the perfect balance between being weighty and warm. This humble servant of Christ is worth knowing.

The biographer is the subject’s son. Often that is a disaster. He, however, never allowed the hyperbole to start rolling. His respect is through the roof, but this isn’t a work of hagiography. Though Stuart lived an exceptional Christian life, his weaknesses though not serious were clear to me in this work. He was gentle and I don’t think he enjoyed conflict even if he got drawn in to it. He never completely dodged anything, but he didn’t perhaps dig in his heels like some of his contemporaries did.

His early life is brief and the story really takes off in his college days. His conversion wasn’t spectacular, but incredibly interesting to read. Quickly, he jumps into serving the Lord. He begins his ministry in Edinburgh and marries. A love of missions soon takes shape. Later he becomes passionate for mission to Jewish people. Along the way, there’s thrilling exposure to revival.

You’ll cross other names as his life seemed to intersect with other awesome servants of Christ regularly. There’s devotion throughout as well as he is an encouragement toward prayer, service, impact and holiness. He is the kind of man I’d like to be.

Banner publishes or reprints one or more biographies a year. Making them part of my reading for the year has richly blessed me over several years. Count this one in that exalted company!

I received this book free from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

Matthew Through Old Testament Eyes by David Capes

What volume could be more important than the one on Matthew in an NT series that aims at considering the book from an OT perspective? Matthew, as Capes explained, has been loved since its earliest days specifically for its OT connections. Additionally, Matthew particularly shines in this series’ unique design. Matthew has so many special features that pulling those out for observation is especially rich for us.

This series is not an exegetical commentary offering. Without apology, it’s a second level asset. We must, then, grade it on its aims. In that vein, it is clearly a winner. Beyond the obvious OT allusions, it is structure that best shines here. Whether macro or micro, Capes stays alert for important structure and offers real understanding to us.

Though its scholarly underpinnings are first rate, this book is engagingly written in a way that any Bible student could be enriched by it. It’s not written for scholars, but they will appreciate it. It’s more about what brings Matthew to life.

The Introduction is engagingly written. It doesn’t really answer any questions, but it tells you what they are. Probably most readers aren’t really after those questions anyway, and there are other major commentaries than can better address them.

Every chapter of Matthew gets a chapter here. Not every word or phrase is covered, but the big picture is beautifully told. I especially enjoy the type of things that get a shaded box to discuss. That’s where the treasure is in this book, so don’t miss them.

This is special series filling a real niche and this one on Matthew gets its due here. If you understand what you’re getting, you’ll love it.

I received this book free from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.