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This is volume six of a projected eighteen-volume
set of commentaries written by capable scholars, using the New Living
Translation text throughout the series. Volume six combines three Old Testament
books, Job by August H. Konkel and Ecclesiastes and Song of Songs by Tremper
Longman III.
This series attempts to “provide pastors and
laypeople with up-to-date evangelical scholarship on the Old and New Testaments.
It’s designed to equip pastors and Christian leaders with exegetical and
theological knowledge to better understand and apply God’s Word by presenting
the message of each passage as well as an overview of other issues surrounding
the text.”
These three Old Testament books from the wisdom
literature section will be useful for preaching and teaching. While it reflects
good exegesis, the commentary does not take the reader into all the research
that supports the results. For example, you will find good and useful
information on the particular book’s background relating to authorship, date,
audience, literary style, as well as major themes of the book. Each one of those
topics has bearing on understanding, interpreting, and teaching the passages.
Each book also contains a helpful and easily applicable outline of the book that
can also readily help you recognize the book’s content.
Another example of the helpfulness of these
commentaries is reflected in Konkel’s section, “theological concerns” from
Job—the character of God, covenant, creation, evil, Satan, people, justice, and
the Redeemer. All three of these OT books would be a challenge for today’s
audience because they both reflect and remind us that this universe is full of
mystery and incomprehensibility to the human mind. Often there are things that
do not fit the normal pattern of behavior, even though there is an obvious moral
order. Things happen that appear to be paradoxical and certainly not always
predictable, but God is always the sovereign, be it in Job’s struggle to
understand his plight or Qoholeth’s attempt to understand the difference between
the earthly and heavenly perspective of things. Both Konkel and Longman have
done good work that will benefit us in many ways. Each chapter and/or section
has the NLT text in full, a brief but credible exegetical section, and then the
commentary.
If the remaining volumes in this series support
my conclusion about volume six, this will be a helpful and useful series.
- Charles Dunahoo, CEP Coordinator
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