TRAPP'S CLASSIC COMMENTARY ON THE NEW
TESTAMENTJohn TrappIn his opening
lecture to "Commenting & Commentaries"
Charles Haddon Spurgeon wrote the
following about this set of
Commentaries:"Would it be possible to
eulogise too much the incomparably
sententious and suggestive folios of
JOHN TRAPP? Trapp will be most valuable
to men of discernment, to thoughtful
men, to men who only want a start in a
line of thought, and are then able to
run alone. Trapp excels in witty
stories on the one hand, and learned
allusions on the other. You will not
thoroughly enjoy him unless you can
turn to the original, and yet a mere
dunce at classics will prize him. His
writings remind me of himself: he was a
pastor, hence his holy practical
remarks; he was the head of a public
school, and everywhere we see his
profound scholarship; he was for some
time amid the guns and drums of a
parliamentary garrison, and he gossips
and tells queer anecdotes like a man
used to a soldier's life; yet withal,
he comments as if he had been nothing
else but a commentator all his days.
Trapp is my especial companion and
treasure; I can read him when I am too
weary for anything else. Trapp is salt,
pepper, mustard, vinegar, and all the
other condiments. Put him on the table
when you study, and when you have your
dish ready, use him by way of spicing
the whole thing. Yes, gentlemen, read
Trapp certainly, and if you catch the
infection of his consecrated humour, so
much the better for your hearers.""John
Trapp's (1601-1669) New Testament
commentary is an old Puritan classic,
often reprinted, and packed with
colorful paraphrases and captivating
illustrations. It is soundly Reformed
and always worth consulting in
conjunction with other commentaries." -
Joel R. Beeke, Puritan Refomred
Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids,
Michigan