ETHICS
Carol LaHurd
"Peace-making as One Response to Terrorist Violence" In
Journal of Lutheran Ethics. October 2002
http://www.elca.org/jle
ETHICS
Carol LaHurd
"This Lord Is Near to All Who Call on Him" In
Journal of Lutheran Ethics. February 2002
http://www.elca.org/jle
THEOLOGY
Carol LaHurd
"Middle East Peace and Unpleasant Listening" In
Dialog: A Journal of Theology. 2009 : 113-115
THEOLOGY
Carol LaHurd
"Philadelphia ’97: Reflections of a Lay Ecumenist" In
Dialog: A Journal of Theology. 1997 : 248-250
THEOLOGY
Carol LaHurd
"Seven Middle East Lessons the United States Should Have Learned (and Apparently Hasn’t)" In
Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 30, editorial Winter 1991 : 6-7
THEOLOGY
Carol LaHurd
"Working Toward the Telos of Shalom" Spring In
Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 31, 1992 : 85-86
BIBLICAL STUDIES
Carol LaHurd
"Luther‘s Legacy in the Women‘s Bible Study" Spring In
Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 45, no. 1, 2006 : 29-35
The article traces the history of Lutheran women’s Bible studies in the United States back to the late 1800s, reports reflections of contemporary Bible study authors and participants, and analyzes the role of biblical critical methods and Lutheran theology in such studies. With Susan McArver and Diane Jacobson.
BIBLICAL STUDIES
Carol LaHurd
"Response to Mark McVann: Exactly What’s Ritual about the Experience of Reading/Hearing Mark’s Gospel?" In
Semeia. vol. 67, 1994 : 199-208
In response to McVann’s “Reading Mark Ritually: Honor-Shame and the Ritual of Baptism,” this essay summarizes McVann’s application of Victor Turner’s ritual model and assesses support for McVann’s thesis about Jesus’ status transformation in Mark’s gospel, while raising larger questions about the functioning of ritual in relation to boundaries and the experiences of reading and hearing narrative texts.
BIBLICAL STUDIES
Carol LaHurd
"Rediscovering the Lost Women in Luke 15" Summer In
Biblical Theology Bulletin. vol. 24, no. 2, 1994 : 66-76
Drawing on personal interviews with six Arab Christian women living in the United States, the article reinterprets the Luke 15 parables in light of the women’s own responses to the parables and their experiences of life in the modern contexts of Egypt and Lebanon.