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Products>Matthew: A Commentary, Volume 2: The Churchbook, Matthew 13–28 (Revised and Expanded Edition)

Matthew: A Commentary, Volume 2: The Churchbook, Matthew 13–28 (Revised and Expanded Edition)

Publisher:
, 2007
ISBN: 9780802845078
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Overview

Recognized as a masterly commentary when it first appeared, Frederick Dale Bruner’s study of Matthew is now available as a greatly revised and expanded two-volume work -- the result of seven years of careful refinement, enrichment, and updating.

Through this commentary, crafted especially for teachers, pastors, and Bible students, Bruner aims "to help God’s people love what Matthew’s Gospel says." Bruner’s work is at once broadly historical and deeply theological. It is historical in drawing extensively on great church teachers through the centuries and on the classical Christian creeds and confessions. It is theological in that it unpacks the doctrines in each passage, chapter, and section of the Gospel. Consciously attempting to bridge past and present, Bruner asks both what Matthew’s Gospel said to its first hearers and what it says to readers today. As a result, his commentary is profoundly relevant to contemporary congregations and to those who guide them.

Bruner’s commentary is replete with lively, verse by verse discussion of Matthew’s text. While each chapter expounds a specific topic or doctrine, the book’s format consists of a vivid, original translation of the text followed by faithful exegesis and critical analysis, a survey of historical commentary on the text, and current applications of the text or theme under study. In this revision Bruner continues to draw on the best in modern scholarship -- including recent work by W. D. Davies and Dale C. Allison Jr., by Ulrich Luz, and by many others -- adding new voices to the reading of Matthew. At the same time he cites the classic commentaries of Chrysostom, Jerome, Augustine, Luther, Calvin, Bengel, and the rest, who, like Bruner himself, were not simply doctrinal teachers but also careful exegetes of Scripture. Such breadth and depth of learning assure that Bruner’s Matthew will remain, as a reviewer for Interpretation wrote, "the most dog-eared commentary on the shelf."

Volume 2 of Bruner’s commentary is called The Churchbook because Bruner sees Matthew 13–28 as concerned primarily with the life of the church and discipleship. Continuing his Volume 1 Christbook exposition, Bruner shows here how the focus of Matthew shifts, from Jesus teaching about who he is to teaching mainly about what his church is. Bruner’s Churchbook commentary divides the second half of Matthew according to its major ecclesiological themes: the church’s faith (chapters 13–17), the church’s love (18–20), the church’s history (21–23), the church’s hope (24–25), and the church’s passion (26–28).

Eminently readable, rich in biblical insight, and ecumenical in tone, Bruner’s two-volume commentary on Matthew now stands among the best in the field.

Check out more commentaries from Eerdmans with the Eerdmans Commentary Collection (13 vols.).

Resource Experts
  • Draws on the writings of great teacher throughout church history
  • Unpacks the theological content of each passage in Matthew
  • Focuses on the second half of Matthew’s gospel

Top Highlights

“perhaps the most crucial teaching of Jesus about his self-understanding and [his] conception of his mission” (Page 335)

“Peter has not learned that leadership in the church is not first of all a matter of doing things for Jesus; it is first of all letting Jesus speak, and then doing the things he says we are to do—that is, it is first expository preaching and teaching and then the obediences they elicit.” (Page 169)

“Apparently in Jesus’ opinion a little child is the best definition of a great person. It is not so much the child’s subjective innocence or purity that is in view as it is the child’s objective smallness and low status. The child, in the opinion of Jesus’ culture, had to limit itself to listening and obeying (Bonnard, 268).” (Page 208)

“Six days were considered the number of days necessary to prepare for a holy event in Israel: Creation had prepared six days for the institution of the Sabbath (Gen 1); Moses waited six days on Sinai for the glory of the Lord (Exod 24:16). And now another six days bring the Transfiguration of God’s Son.” (Page 165)

“The only cures for spiritual pride are a greater sense of grace and a keener openness to divine warning, both of which this story delivers.” (Page 320)

Frederick Dale Bruner serves on the adjunct faculty at Fuller Theological Seminary, and is George and Lyda Wasson Professor of Religion Emeritus at Whitworth University, where he taught from 1975 to 1997. His other books include The Gospel of John: A Commentary and Matthew: A Commentary, Volume 1 and Volume 2.

Reviews

6 ratings

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  1. John David Moody
  2. Ken McClurkin

    Ken McClurkin

    2/23/2022

  3. Peter Wise

    Peter Wise

    11/2/2021

    Some helpful material, but beware that there is also false teaching in these books regarding a second way of salvation for those who have not heard. Bruner holds that they will be saved per Matt. 25 (Judgment of the Nations) by doing good works. I found his discussion of this subject disturbing, and have thus lowered my rating of Bruner's commentaries on Matthew.
  4. Glenn Crouch

    Glenn Crouch

    4/1/2020

    This has been a marvellous journey through the Gospel of Matthew. I’ve been deeply blessed, challenged, inspired and encouraged in this 2nd of two volumes on Matthew by Bruner. I don’t always agree with the Author but he does make me think and it is good to re-evaluate your understandings. I very much appreciate his use and insights of Luther and Calvin, as well as his coverage of Catholic thought (and the more scholarly side of Protestantism). So whilst scholarly in some senses, this commentary does not get too deeply into the underlying Greek nor does it stay too long in the various academic debates (neither are ignored). In fact, like the first volume, I found this to be a very readable commentary - and do think this is much value in reading the whole two volumes as the Author takes us on a remarkable journey through the Gospel of Matthew. I’ve found this book to be a valuable one as a Pastor - not only inspiration for Sermons, but also for Bible Studies and Devotionals.
  5. Marco Ceccarelli
    "Parents who out of love for God and neighbor wish to limit the number of children in their family can, under the authority of Jesus' love command ("from which all other commands dangle," v. 40), contravene creation's command to "be fruitul and multiply" and so use scientific contraception" (p. 420) WONDERFUL
  6. Peter Wise

    Peter Wise

    11/6/2014

  7. Faithlife User

    Faithlife User

    10/31/2014

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Digital list price: $50.99
Save $6.00 (11%)