A substantial critical study of the Christian concept of sacrifice has been sorely lacking for many years. Bob Daly has now more than adequately filled that gap and in a most readable volume successfully achieved his aim of exposing mistaken ideas on the subject by unveiling what that sacrifice it really is - nothing less than the divine love that lies at the heart of all truly human life. -- Paul F. Bradshaw
'Culling from his previously published books and numerous articles on sacrifice, Daly lays out once again the historical and scriptural groundwork for a comprehensive understanding of sacrifice. But this book is no mere updating of his earlier work. It demonstrates fresh insight and impeccable systematic scholarship as he reverses his starting point and interprets anew. Daly begins by disclosing clearly and succinctly in the opening pages of Sacrifice Unveiled what has now come to be his central point: Christian sacrifice is best understood as a Trinitarian, inter-personal gift-exchange. It is a mutually self-giving event taking place between persons. Christian sacrifice does not begin with us and what we do for God, but begins with God and unfolds in a trinity of moments. Daly's methodology also marks a reversal, just as his central point turned upside down his approach to sacrifice. Rather than presenting an historical/theological argument from the beginning and concluding by fleshing out his new insight, he reinterprets the data from the purview of his new central point. This book is not just written for theologians; Daly intends it to be for a much wider audience. Composed in an accessible and engaging style, he weaves personal experiences, stories, homiletic challenge, and solid theology together in such a way to be appealing to a broad range of readers. While unabashedly Roman Catholic, this book is sensitive to ecumenical issues and could be an ecumenical dialogue partner in itself. What a gift Robert J. Daly has given to both the Church and the academic community in Sacrifice Unveiled: The True Meaning of Christian Sacrifice with his reinterpretation of Christian sacrifice as Trinitarian gift-exchange! Daly began sharing his new thinking with me several years ago. It is with delight that I read his finished magnum opus. It has already challenged my own teaching (especially for paschal mystery) and reshaped my thinking and way of living. I can only hope it does so for other readers. We owe Bob Daly a great debt of gratitude.' - Joyce Ann Zimmerman, Institute for Liturgical Ministry, Dayton, Ohio, USA -- Joyce Ann Zimmerman
...deserves careful attention, not only from scholars, but from students, and those concerned about how old ideas that have been part of the Christian vocabulary need to be looked at critically. Church Times, September 2009
A substantial and valuable study that puts the divine love right at the heart of what sacrifice means. Gerald O'Collins SJ, The Pastoral Review, January/February 2010
Reviewed in Franciscan, Vol. 22, No. 3, September 2010 (UK) 'A gift to anyone with an appetite for reasonable study'
'For this reviewer the opening 25 pages offered a bracing and thought-provoking thesis...I find what he [Daly] affirms a very helpful contribution, and I have already discovered that it preaches well in the midst of congregations who do indeed think of sacrifice as fundamentally a 'giving up'. -- Ecclesiology
'I consider this book to be one of the five most significant books dealing with liturgy in our baptismal life, mission and witness published in the last ten years. It is a magisterial treatment of a central insight in that, as Bob Daly never tires of saying, is essential to our everyday Christian living.' -- Liturgy News
This work is astounding in its breadth... remarkably accessible, and will serve specialists and non-specialists alike. I highly recommend this new work and imagine that it will be an important work for a long time to come. -- Theological Book Review Volume 23 No.1