Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Book Review: Feasting on the Gospels-Matthew, Volume 1

Feasting on the Gospels--Matthew, Volume 1: A Feasting on the Word CommentaryFeasting on the Gospels--Matthew, Volume 1: A Feasting on the Word Commentary by Cynthia A. Jarvis
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A practical commentary for practicing preachers.

This may be one of the most user-friendly commentaries I've encountered. It takes a passage-by-passage (pericope) approach rather than verse-by-verse. Its foremost concern is to provide the reader with practical insights and suggestions on preaching the passage to his or her congregation. (This volume covers Matthew 1-13.)

The format of this commentary is as follows: The text of the passage is given on the left page, which is followed by four columns spanning both the left and right pages. These columns continue for two more spreads (so six total pages for each passage). The layout is most easily read in a printed form. (Review copy was en e-book form and the reading didn't flow nearly as smoothly, in my opinion.)

The four columns provide four different perspectives of the text. 1) Theological, 2) Pastoral, 3) Exegetical, 4) Homiletical. Respectively they roughly answer the following questions a preacher may pose to the text:

* Theological: what does this passage reveal about God? What questions does this passage raise about God? How does this passage fit into the overall narrative of scripture about God?
* Pastoral: In what ways might this passage apply to daily lives of 21st century people? What questions does it raise about how we live our lives as members of God's community?
* Exegetical: How do we interpret this passage in light of literary, rhetorical, historical, cultural, social, political, and religious contexts?
* Homiletical: What are some suggested approaches to preaching this passage?

In my reading I found myself seeing text in ways that I hadn't considered before. The suggestions in the homiletical perspectives looked to be particularly useful, especially for passages that are preached more often, for preaching the text in new ways.

Potential purchasers of this commentary may be concerned with what theological biases might be present. I found it to be well-balanced. The editors and contributors are predominantly from mainline Protestant denominations. It is most certainly not from a decidedly evangelical perspective. But it does treat the text and the Bible seriously and authoritatively. For those worried about liberalism, I found nothing to warrant such fears. I would classify this commentary as being right in the middle, treating both the text and contexts seriously.

I highly recommend this commentary to anyone who is called upon to preach, whether regularly or not. I look forward to the forthcoming volumes in this series.

(This review is based on an Advance Review Copy supplied through NetGalley by the publisher.)


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