Isaiah wrote to correct the flagrant wrongs among God’s people and to comfort them with an astonishing hope far beyond what they could ever deserve.
Here are our choices for the best commentaries on Isaiah.
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Isaiah wrote to correct the flagrant wrongs among God’s people and to comfort them with an astonishing hope far beyond what they could ever deserve.
Here are our choices for the best commentaries on Isaiah.
See all of TGC’s resources on Isaiah.
Introductory Commentaries
For Sunday school teachers and small group leaders without advanced training
The Message of Isaiah, Revised Edition
Barry G. Webb
Bible Speaks Today
IVP Academic, 2023
Mathison applauds Webb for making most of the space he was allotted for this volume, offering “very illuminating insight into the text.” Webb’s strength is in helping the reader see how the message of Isaiah comes together in a unified way.
Isaiah
J. Alec Motyer
Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries
IVP Academic, 2015
Motyer masterfully helps readers to grasp how the message of the book fits together as a whole. As Longman observes, “Motyer and Oswalt [see below] provide the most lucid exposition of Isaiah from a traditional viewpoint that sees the whole book as coming largely from the eighth century.” This volume is more than a summary of Motyer’s more technical work (see below); it also provides many additional insights.
Isaiah
Ray Ortlund
TGC Bible Commentary
The Gospel Coalition, 2023
Ortlund synthesizes Isaiah into an accessible resource for lay readers. He carefully follows the prophecy’s flow of thought and also explores how Isaiah relates to Christ and the church today.
Preaching Commentaries
For pastors and Bible teachers preparing to proclaim the Word
“Isaiah” in Proverbs–Isaiah
Geoffrey W. Grogan
Expositor's Bible Commentary
Zondervan Academic, 2008
Longman says, “Grogan has produced one of the best short commentaries on the prophet Isaiah. He is particularly adept at bringing out the theological meaning. . . . While he presents a strong argument in favor of the authorial unity of the book, he does not write off some who, while accepting the idea of supernatural prophecy, opt for multiple authorship.”
Isaiah 40–55 and Isaiah 56–66
R. Reed Lessing
Concordia Commentary
Concordia Publishing, 2011, 2014
Lessing’s invigorating exposition will help pastors make the original text more accessible and understandable. He’s careful to keep the larger biblical storyline in mind as he writes, and he offers a fresh theological interpretation of Isaiah 56–66, the often-neglected concluding chapters of the prophecy, demonstrating their continuity with Isaiah 1–55. He shows how the closing chapters bring Isaiah’s ‘righteousness’ and ‘servant’ themes to culmination with the inclusion of Gentiles in the people of God.
The Prophecy of Isaiah: An Introduction & Commentary
J. Alec Motyer
IVP Academic, 1993
Motyer’s masterwork. As Longman observes “It is thoroughly researched and thought-out. It represents the best of a conservative evangelical approach to the book at the end of the twentieth century.” Despite some weaknesses in its dated format, the commentary is so well-written it can be read straight through devotionally. Motyer provides careful linguistic and poetic analysis as well as clear outlines that would translate easily for preaching/teaching. His focus is on giving an apologetic for Isaiah’s unity and pre-exilic date, and on expounding its rich inter-textual connections and theology. Highly recommended.
The Book of Isaiah, Chapters 1–39, and The Book of Isaiah, Chapters 40–66
John N. Oswalt
New International Commentary on the Old Testament
Eerdmans, 1986
Oswalt’s NICOT commentary carefully balances the book’s structure, the flow of thought of each passage, and exegetical nuggets from the original language to support its interpretive decisions. Oswalt is fabulous on verse-by-verse details.
Scholarly Commentaries
For scholars and pastor-theologians proficient in biblical Hebrew
Isaiah 56–66
John Goldingay
International Critical Commentary
T&T Clark, 2014
Goldingay is a critical scholar but a noted specialist on “Deutero” and “Trito” Isaiah. His breathtaking work is insightful and deserves the scholarly distinction it has received.
Isaiah III: Volume 1 (Isaiah 40–48), Volume 2 (Isaiah 49–55), and Volume 3 (Isaiah 56–66)
Jan L. Koole
Historical Commentary on the Old Testament
Peeters, 1997, 1998, 2001
Koole treats every pericope of Isaiah, providing a new translation and then helpfully summarizing the results of his exegesis in non-technical language. Though Koole is a critical scholar, he gives primacy to the final stage of the text. His tripartite commentary is an unsurpassed guide to interpretation of Isaiah’s second half.
The Book of Isaiah: Volume 1 (Chapters 1–18), Volume 2 (Chapters 19–39), and Volume 3 (Chapters 40–66)
Edward J. Young
New International Commentary on the Old Testament
Eerdmans, 1992
Massive and meticulous, but a bit tedious in its writing style. Mathison observes that it “is something of a modern classic among Reformed students of Scripture. It has been replaced in the NICOT series by the fine work of Oswalt, but it should not be relegated to the dust bin.”
Isaiah 1–5 and Isaiah 6–12
H. G. M. Williamson
International Critical Commentary
T&T Clark, 2006
Williamson brings together all the relevant aids to exegesis—linguistic, textual, archaeological, historical, literary, and theological—to help the reader understand the meaning of Isaiah’s prophecy. He incorporates a range of secondary scholarly material, examining all the key textual and critical issues surrounding the text. These volumes are essential reading for an academic study of Isaiah.