#1 The Gospel According to John, by D.A. Carson
In this solid evangelical commentary on John’s Gospel, a respected Scripture expositor D.A. Carson makes clear the flow of the text, focusing on the movement of thought rather than on word studies and Greek sytax; engages a small but representative part of the massive secondary literature on John, providing a kind of map of contemporary studies on this Gospel; shows how the Fourth Gospel contributes to biblical and systematic theology, and offers a consistent exposition of John as a evangelistic Gospel. Through the comprehensive introduction such matters as the authenticity, authorship, purpose, and structure of the Gospel are treated with the evangelicalScripture exposition that set Dr. Carson apart.
#2 The Gospel of John – 5 Vols, by James Montgomery Boice
The gifted preacher and Bible teacher combines expert scholarship with practical applications in this accessible commentary. Organizing his subject around five themes (the coming of the light, Christ and Judaism, those who received him, peace in a storm, and triumph through tragedy), Boice provides a thorough verse-by-verse interpretation with contemporary insight for daily living. 1840 pages total, five softcovers from Baker.
#3 Exposition of the Gospel of John, by A.W. Pink
See here.
#4 Gospel of John: A Theological Commentary, by Herman Ridderbos
This commentary to present an exposition of the Fourth Gospel as the Christian Church adopted it. Among other things, this means that it proceeds from the canonical form in which the Gospel has come down to us from ancient times-taking into account the text-critical problems with which the multiplicity of manuscripts and textual witnesses confront us. The author is especially interested in presenting a theological exegesis of the Gospel and dealing with the significance of the gospel message that the Evangelist had in view as he wrote.
#5 The Gospel of John (A Geneva series commentary) by George Hutcheson
Out of print.


