📕 This study explores the theological presuppositions that have informed the major explanations of the work of Christ from the perspective of Wesleyan theology's commitment to the universality of the atonement and its provision for both justification and sanctification. The Whole Christ for the Whole World proposes a paradigm that the author describes as ""personal-relational"" for understanding the work of Christ. Dunning argues that this ""personal-relational"" paradigm more adequately captures the ""whole tenor of Scripture"" than do the legal paradigms that have dominated the Western church, and Dunning seeks to demonstrate that the Wesleyan understanding of the work of Christ has been significantly informed by the mentality of the Eastern church.H. Ray Dunning is professor emeritus of theology at Trevecca Nazarene University in Nashville, Tennessee, where he served for thirty-one years. He is the author of several books, including Grace, Faith, and Holiness (1988), a Wesleyan systematic theology.