4 Quotes & Sayings By Roger E Olson

Roger E. Olson is an internationally recognized authority on the Bible, marriage, sexuality, and parenting. He is the author of more than thirty books, including The Bible Doesn't Say That!; Saving Your Marriage Before It Starts; Parent-Child Bonding; The Homosexuality of God; The Nurture Assumption: Why Children Turn Out the Way They Do; The Giver's Paradox: A Critical Examination of the New Atheist Movement; On Looking Into the Face of God: A Christian View of Eternity; Not By Sight Only: An Introduction to Biblical Hermeneutics (illustrated by Jim Stangland); and Augustine on Marriage and Celibacy. He is Professor of New Testament at Biola University's Talbot School of Theology, where he has taught since 1986 Read more

Dr. Olson has appeared on TV and radio programs around the world. He also serves as a consultant for various organizations including Focus on the Family International (president 1989-92), FamilyLife (president 1992-93), and Hope for Today Ministries (vice president).

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Surely we can only come to understand each other's beliefs by means of direct encounter and open, honest discussion. In the meantime, many free churches invite all believers in Jesus Christ to the Table for the sake of true spiritual unity that transcends intellectual differences of interpretation. Withholding sacramental sharing on the basis of disagreement about the nature of the Lord's Supper seems odd to us. What two people think exactly alike about the act? We are not offended by Catholics' closed Communion, but we find it odd and exclusive. It places intellectual understanding above fellowship among disciples of Jesus Christ. Roger E. Olson
2
Scripture is our norming norm and tradition is our normed norm and that in a doctrinal controversy Scripture alone has absolute veto power while The Great Tradition (orthodox doctrine) has a vote but not a veto. Roger E. Olson
3
If God is love (1 John 4:7) but intended Christ’s atoning death to be the propitiation for only certain people so only they have any chance of being saved, then 'love' has no intelligible meaning when referring to God. All Christians agree that God is love. But believers in limited atonement must interpret God’s love as somehow compatible with God unconditionally selecting some people to eternal torment in hell when He could save them (because election to salvation and thus salvation itself is unconditional). Roger E. Olson