Allan McNicol dares the unthinkable. In the maelstrom of postmodern ambivalence about truth and its attendant multicultural naļveté, McNicol asserts that The Book, the Jewish and Christian Bible, unfolds a unified realistic narrative of the one Gods calling, sustaining, and consummating a special people of God through Gods irrevocable promises. McNicol constructs his meta-narrative through the dynamic of the unimpeachable character of God, that has too often not been assigned its decisive role as the central plot motivator that coalesces, coordinates, and finally crafts the unity of the Bible precisely through its great diversity of traditions and cultural influences. A must read for any who desire to make the Judaeo-Christian claims of the Bible a vital contender for a hearing amidst the cacophony of truth-claims in todays public square. * DAVID P. MOESSNER, TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY, USA * Allan McNicols provocative monograph endeavours to identify and locate a cohesiveness in both Old and New Testaments. This readable book concerns the history of divine faithfulness shown to a marginalized people, and it strives to convince Christians that the whole Bible is unified and consistent in this overall theological teaching. Readers interested in themes such as sin, repentance or judgement will find much in this evangelical study to get their teeth into, and to debate. * J.K. ELLIOTT, UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS, UK * This exercise in biblical theology treats the Bible as a realistic narrative, with the two testaments composing a unified story of an enduring relationship between God and Gods people. Central to McNicols overarching argument is the constancy of Gods promises to the people of Israel, despite the biblical narrative climaxing in the missions of Jesus the Nazorean and his witnesses. His case for the Bible as a unified story merits careful consideration. * DAVID NEVILLE, CHARLES STURT UNIVERSITY, AUSTRALIA * The Persistence of Gods Endangered Promises is highly accessible to a broad audience. Students, laypeople, and scholars can benefit from the argument of the book. It is an excellent contribution for those who wish to discover a plausible unifying thread in the Bible. -- James W. Thompson * Society of Biblical Literature *