"A creative and well-researched presentation of faith thinking. Anyone who desires to communicate the gospel to a contemporary audience will find this both a challenging and a rewarding read."Graham McFarlane, Vice Principal Academic, London School of Theology"In spite of the centrality of the cross to biblical faith, old formulations and cultural formulations today cloud its significance. Alan Mann's voice is needed and welcome. In these pages, we find a moving narrative of atonement, from a penetrating analysis of the world we inhabit to the resolution of the human experience of chronic shame in the invitation of the Eucharist."Joel B. Green, Professor of New Testament Interpretation, Fuller Theological Seminary"Instead of ramping up older theories and seeking to impose them on a conscience no longer amenable to them, Mann starts afresh with the concept of shame in our world and shows how a reframed story can lead yet again to the magical moment of history: the cross of Jesus Christ."Scot McKnight, Professor of New Testament, Northern Baptist Theological Seminary"The greatest strenght of Mann's work is his cultural awareness. ... [It] would be stimulating for academics and armchair theologians due to the questions it raises at it strives for integration between our culture's conscience and Christian proclamation."-Benjamin G. White, Religion and Theology, Vol. 24, Issue 2, April 2017"[Mann's] basic premises offer fresh ways of thinking about atonement. ... This book provides much food for thought, and also resonates as an approach to the atonement for twenty-first century people."-Derek Tovey, Stimulus, Vol 23, Issue 3"Mann has his finger on the postmodern (ultramodern) pulse, and pushes traditionalists beyond the notion that the Bible has a single, unambiguous theology of the cross and atonement. For those interested in taking a step in a slightly different direction concerning atonement, this book will do that for sure."- Robert W. Canoy, Review and Expositor, 113, pp 562-564