Item Type: Journal Articles

CHURCH HISTORY AND HISTORICAL THEOLOGY

Kari Kloos "Seeing the Invisible God: Augustine‘s Reconfiguration of Theophany Narrative Exegesis." In Augustinian Studies. vol. 36, no. 2, 2005 : 396-420

Examines how Augustine challenged ancient Christian claims that Christ appeared in the Old Testament theophanies of Genesis and Exodus, arguing that his developing Trinitarian theology reframed Christological exegesis.

Kari Kloos "John Calvin‘s Only Public Office for Women, the Care of the Poor: Wet Nurses, Widows, and Welfare among French Refugees and in the Reformed Tradition" In Calvin Studies . January 2010 : 229-253

THEOLOGY

Carol LaHurd "Holding Together the Gospel and Interfaith Relations in a Lifelong Journey" In Currents in Theology and Mission. vol. 32, no. 4, August 2005 : 245-255

The essay consults interfaith encounters, diverse biblical portrayals of God, and theological responses to religious pluralism to answer the question of how a Christian can both be faithful to the Gospel and respond to persons of other religious traditions with respect, friendship, and shared social action.

Carol LaHurd "Recite in the Name of Your Lord: Resources for Introducing Islam and the Qur’an to Christians" Summer In Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 42, no. 2, 2002 : 170-172

In the face of ongoing ethnic and political conflicts worldwide, reading and discussion of scripture across religious boundaries is one strategy for defusing antagonisms. Drawing upon the author’s experience with both biblical interpretation and dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims, this essay describes potential benefits and hazards of such interfaith reading and provides practical suggestions for initiating this form of dialogue encounter.

Carol LaHurd "The Disarming Word: Reading Scripture in the Boundary Zones" Spring-Summer In Journal of Ecumenical Studies. vol. 38, no. 2-3, 2001 : 271-285

In the face of ongoing ethnic and political conflicts worldwide, reading and discussion of scripture across religious boundaries is one strategy for defusing antagonisms. Drawing upon the author’s experience with both biblical interpretation and dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims, this essay describes potential benefits and hazards of such interfaith reading and provides practical suggestions for initiating this form of dialogue encounter.

ETHICS

Carol LaHurd "The ‘Other’ in Biblical Perspective" In Currents in Theology and Mission. vol. 24, no. 5, October 1997 : 411-424

Examining such texts as Jesus and the Samaritan woman in John 4, this essay surveys biblical treatments of the ethnic and religious “other” to provide resources for a current day hermeneutics of dialogue.

THEOLOGY

Carol LaHurd "Clash or Cooperation? Prospects for Muslim-Christian Relations in the United States" Fall In Listening: Journal of Religion and Culture. ed. LaHurd, Carol. vol. 31, no. 3, 1996 : 219-235

Guest editor for theme issue and author of article. LaHurd summarizes the global history of Muslim-Christian interaction, explores issues that can help or hinder future relations and cooperation among Muslims and Christians in the United States, and provides an appendix of resources for guiding such encounters.

Carol LaHurd "So that the Sinner Will Repent: Forgiveness in Islam and Christianity" Fall In Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 35, no. 4, 1996 : 287-292

In light of scriptural and theological traditions, LaHurd compares the concepts of repentance and forgiveness in Islam and Christianity, as well views of human sin and God’s response in each.

Carol LaHurd "Public and Private Realities: Women, Youth and Family Tradition" Spring In Word & World. vol. 16, no. 2, 1996 : 143-150

Reflecting on her own encounters with Arab Muslim women, LaHurd describes theoretical principles and present day diverse realities to illuminate some modern issues for Muslim women, youth, and families.

Carol LaHurd "Reading Each Others’ Scriptures" Winter In Dialog: A Journal of Theology. vol. 34, 1995 : 56-59

In the process of reviewing Jon D. Levenson’s 1993 The Death and Resurrection of the Beloved Son, LaHurd raises questions about the lenses through which Jewish and Christians scholars interpret each other’s biblical texts.