Ever asked a pastor or professor, "What's the best commentary on Romans?" Best Commentaries answers that question for every book of the Bible — by crowdsourcing the collective wisdom of scholars, journals, and thousands of everyday readers.^1
Created in 2008 by John Dyer — a coder, professor, and VP of Educational Technology at Dallas Theological Seminary — the site was inspired by Rotten Tomatoes. Dyer wanted to aggregate the trusted recommendation lists of scholars like D.A. Carson and Tremper Longman III into a single, searchable database with a transparent scoring algorithm.^2 Today the site catalogs over 10,700 volumes with more than 7,100 reviews and 423 curated libraries from seminaries, scholars, and organizations like The Gospel Coalition.^1
The scoring system weighs average ratings, review volume, and library inclusions so that a well-reviewed, widely recommended commentary rises above one with a perfect score but few reviews.^3 The result is a practical starting point for seminary students building a library, pastors preparing a sermon series, or any believer who wants to go deeper in the Word.
Why Christians Love It"If you're willing to purchase physical commentaries, I'd recommend bestcommentaries.com. I use it all the time." — Reddit user^4
"It's really fun to see the church coming together to affirm the work of a fellow brother and praise it as a gift from God." — John Dyer, creator^2
Notable- Logos Bible Software references Best Commentaries rankings, noting that 15 NICOT/NICNT volumes are ranked #1 for their respective books on the site^5
- John Dyer holds a PhD from Durham University and is the author of From the Garden to the City and People of the Screen: How Evangelicals Created the Digital Bible^6
- Free to use; the site earns through affiliate partnerships with Amazon, Christian Book, and Logos^3
- Also maintains a bibliography of commentaries by female scholars, Roman Catholic scholars, Jewish scholars, and Korean-language commentaries^1