"The strengths of Hamilton's revised Handbook on the Pentateuch include its balanced attention to all five books of the Pentateuch, helpful and updated bibliographies, fair-minded exposure to critical debates and competing viewpoints, sustained attention to theological themes and insights, and a clear and readable style. The book functions as a substantive one-volume commentary on the Pentateuch written from a moderate and informed evangelical perspective."
Dennis Olson, professor of Old Testament, Princeton Theological Seminary
"It is a pleasure to recommend this work as an excellent introduction to the first five books of the Bible. Its sensitivity to the literary structures and emphases in the texts as well as its full awareness of classic and contemporary exegetical issues and scholarship provide an essential tool for introducing students and all interested readers to the fascinating world of the Pentateuch. Scholars in the field will also benefit from Hamilton's presentation of new and original ideas and up-to-date bibliographies."
Richard S. Hess, professor of Old Testament, Denver Seminary
"Hamilton has produced a second edition that is even more helpful for present and future generations of Bible students than the first edition. He has succeeded by revising and expanding the first edition with new insights garnered from biblical scholarship at large and from his own study as a biblical commentator and college teacher. The second edition maintains the original's strengths of succinctness without vagueness and simplicity without simplemindedness. The book is brimming with information that exhibits the proper balance of comments on ancient backgrounds, critical theories, and the biblical text."
Kenneth A. Mathews, professor of divinity, Beeson Divinity School
"The second edition of Hamilton's Handbook on the Pentateuch follows in the tradition of the first. It is not simply a rehearsal of biblical content but offers concise and scholarly summaries and articulations of modern scholarship on the Pentateuch, while also offering well-crafted, traditional, evangelical positions on many difficult issues that confront readers of the Pentateuch. The updated bibliographies are remarkable and provide valuable guidance to college and seminary students as they begin their own research. The format is pleasing, with many subsections that guide the reader along. Numerous tables and an index complete what will certainly prove to be a valuable reference and research tool."
Peter Enns, Abram S. Clemens Professor of Biblical Studies, Eastern University
"Hamilton achieves with apparent ease what so many only attempt. He unites historical study with literary insight; he integrates diachronic critical concerns with synchronic, structurally sensitive insights; and he deftly places his own fresh reading of the texts in conversation with an astonishing range of scholarly literature that represents the full spectrum of research on the Pentateuch. All this is done within a sound theological framework that allows the text to be heard naturally as a rule of faith for the church."
Lawson Stone, professor of Old Testament, Asbury Theological Seminary
"Hamilton's Handbook on the Pentateuch provides an easily accessible and highly informative guide to the books of Genesis through Deuteronomy. Drawing on the best of modern scholarship, this handbook explores these major biblical writings in a manner that is both thorough and in keeping with their status as divine revelation. Amid the plethora of conflicting views expressed about the origins and contents of the Pentateuch, Hamilton offers a balanced and sane analysis, supplemented with up-to-date bibliographies."
T. Desmond Alexander, director of Christian training, Union Theological College, Belfast
Praise for the first edition
"Admirably serves the interests of evangelicals beginning an academic study of the Pentateuch. More advanced students would find its bibliographies useful. If you fall into either of these categories, I heartily commend its purchase."
Gordon Wenham, tutor in Old Testament, Trinity College Bristol
Victor P. Hamilton (PhD, Brandeis University), now retired, was professor of Bible and theology at Asbury University for more than thirty-five years. He is the author of Handbook on the Pentateuch and Handbook on the Historical Books and has written a major commentary on Genesis.