Education
He holds a Bachelor from Dartmouth and an Message Telecommunications Service from Harvard Divinity School, as well as a Doctor of Philosophy from the Princeton Theological Seminary.
theologian university professor
He holds a Bachelor from Dartmouth and an Message Telecommunications Service from Harvard Divinity School, as well as a Doctor of Philosophy from the Princeton Theological Seminary.
Gagnon"s primary fields are Pauline theology and sexuality. Gagnon has been described as "the foremost traditionalist interpreter" on this topic, and has published several books and articles about the subject, such as The Bible and Homosexual Practice, which has been called "one of the most cited works" on the subject. Gagnon"s work on homosexuality relies on both analysis of the biblical text and on arguments based on biology and gender complementarity, in which Gagnon "comes down firmly on the conservative side of the debate." Gagnon"s use of arguments based on "natural law" has been criticized by Jack Bartlett Rogers as applying a "nonbiblical standard" and as incorrectly claiming "that all people who are homosexual have willfully chosen that behavior and therefore can successfully change their sexual identity," although Gagnon responds that this is an "outrageous misrepresentation" of his views.
In the coauthored book Homosexuality and the Bible, Gagnon presents the conservative side of the debate on homosexuality and the church, while Dan O. Via, Professor Emeritus of New Testament at Duke Divinity School, presents the opposing view.