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Best Commentaries on Daniel

The stories and prophecies recorded in the book of Daniel helped God’s people persevere in faith during the Babylonian exile. Daniel’s message is that the sovereign God’s unrivaled power and everlasting dominion will ultimately overcome the wicked, and vindicate the righteous.

Here are our top picks for commentaries on Daniel.

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Introductory Commentaries

For Sunday school teachers and small group leaders without advanced training

The Message of Daniel

Dale R. Davis
Bible Speaks Today
IVP Academic, 2024

Longman flags Davis’s commentaries as must-reads. He writes, “Even on those interpretive points where I might disagree with him, I enjoy reading Davis. Pastors should certainly not skip this volume.”

Daniel

Paul R. House
Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries
IVP Academic, 2018

This concise, conservative commentary provides careful exegetical insight and theological information. House is informed and responsible in his exegesis.

Preaching Commentaries

For pastors and Bible teachers preparing to proclaim the Word

Daniel

Iain M. Duguid
Reformed Expository Commentary
P&R Publishing, 2008

Duguid’s commentary on Daniel is an outstanding reference written from a classically Reformed background. Mathison says it “should be of use to both pastors and general readers.”

Daniel

Sinclair B. Ferguson
The Preacher's Commentary
Thomas Nelson, 2002

Ferguson offers clear and compelling insights into Daniel. He equips Bible teachers to understand, apply, and teach the truth in the text. Ferguson includes innovative ideas for preaching and teaching, vibrant paragraph-by-paragraph exposition, and compelling real-life illustrations.

Daniel

Andrew E. Hill
Expositor's Bible Commentary
Zondervan Academic, 2017

Hill is an evangelical scholar committed to divine inspiration and full authority of the Bible. This comes out clearly in his writing. As Longman explains, “Hill writes with sensitivity to the theological message of the book. He supports the traditional view that the first-person apocalyptic vision reports of Daniel in chapters 7–12 go back to the sixth-century prophet.” With transliterations and translations of Hebrew words, this resource enables Bible teachers and students to understand even the more technical notes.

Daniel

Tremper Longman III
NIV Application Commentary
Zondervan, 1999

Longman explores the original meaning and contemporary significance of this interesting, yet often-enigmatic, biblical book. He explains his move from the ancient text to our modern situation: “Daniel becomes, in the first six chapters, a study of how a person of faith not only copes but even thrives in a hostile cultural setting. In the last half of the book, it raises the question of how we are to understand the apocalyptic sections of Scripture that describe the end of history. The theme of the whole book is that in spite of present difficult circumstances, God is in control and will defeat the forces of evil and oppression.”

Scholarly Commentaries

For scholars and pastor-theologians proficient in biblical Hebrew and Aramaic

Daniel

John J. Collins
Forms of the Old Testament Literature
Eerdmans, 1984

A technical resource for scholars. Collins begins his discussion of Daniel with a survey of the book’s anomalies and an examination of the bearing of form criticism on those anomalies. He explores the book’s place in the canon and the problems with its coherence and bilingualism. Collins also provides a section-by-section commentary with a verse-by-verse structural analysis of each section. Longman says, “A very competent form-critical analysis and summary of discussion of Daniel.”

Daniel

John J. Collins
Hermeneia
Fortress, 1994

Building on his work in the Forms series, Collins provides one of the most thorough scholarly treatments of Daniel. Longman notes that despite Collins’ critical leanings, “evangelicals can learn much from this volume. . . The lengthy and extremely informative introduction includes an essay by A. Y. Collins, ‘The Influence of Daniel on the New Testament.’” This essay especially may interest readers.

Daniel

John E. Goldingay
Word Biblical Commentary
Zondervan Academic, 2019

Goldingay uncovers the mysteries of Daniel, illuminating Daniel’s historical setting and using it to explain the book’s prophecies. His comprehensive work analyzes the composition of the book, demonstrating an amazing grasp of the secondary literature. He also provides a fresh translation. Though readers “will be put off by some of his radical (at least for an evangelical) conclusions, most notable of which are that the stories in chapters 1– 6 are fictitious and the visions are quasi-prophecies,” Longman contends “it would be a major mistake to ignore this important commentary.”