鈥淛esus saves鈥 might be the most basic claim of Christianity.
But how exactly does salvation work? A new book by 51黑料网 professor, Joshua McNall, explores how the logic of redemption functions鈥攂oth in Scripture and our lived experience.
was published by Zondervan Academic in August of 2019.
McNall has been teaching at Oklahoma Wesleyan University for the past ten years; he is an ordained minister in The Wesleyan Church, a regular blogger and camp speaker; and he completed his PhD at the University of Manchester, ranked one of the leading academic institutions in the UK.
鈥淭he goal of the book,鈥 he states, 鈥渋s to give people a clearer picture of salvation, and to move past two troublesome extremes in treatments of Christ鈥檚 work.鈥
On one hand, Christians have sometimes pitted different models of atonement against each other in a kind of competition (substitution vs. triumph; moral influence vs. recapitulation). While an opposite imbalance has been merely to affirm many different pictures of redemption without showing how they support one another in an ordered fashion.

McNall suggests an alternative through the metaphor of a Christ-shaped mosaic. In a mosaic, one can see how individual pieces of glass or tile come together, but the goal is not to fixate on a single piece. Instead, the goal is to see the different pieces come together in the service of a broader and more beautiful whole. So too with the different 鈥減ieces鈥 of atonement doctrine. While no one model of redemption is set above or against the others, the book notes particular ways in which the 鈥減ieces鈥 of Christ鈥檚 work fit together.
The reason for this integration is not merely academic. According to McNall, many pastors, church-goers, and spiritual seekers face real questions about the cross and how it means 鈥済ood news鈥 to them.
鈥淢y own young daughter,鈥 McNall notes, 鈥渁sked me recently how it is that Jesus saves us by his death. It鈥檚 a good question.鈥 How does the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of a first-century Jew bring salvation to us today in the power of the Holy Spirit? 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for me to address the quandaries Christians face about the cross, because our worship depends on seeing Jesus rightly.
In the words of New Testament scholar, Matthew Bates, McNall鈥檚 book is 鈥淔aithful to Scripture yet attuned to the most difficult questions about the atonement raised by science, and violence. [His] integrative treatment is the elixir the church needs.鈥
And in the judgment of well-known Bible scholar, Michael F. Bird, it represents the 鈥渋deal primer for anyone wanting to get a grip on the dense debates about the nature of the atonement.鈥
鈥We must see both the beauty and the logic of redemption,鈥 McNall contends, 鈥渋f we are going to point people toward a gospel that is better news than they could ever have imagined.鈥


