Essay Topic Hub

Biblical
Essays

282+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

282 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Biblical studies occupies a central place in religious education, theology, and humanities courses, where students examine the texts, narratives, and doctrines of the Bible as both sacred scripture and historical literature. The subject draws interest from multiple disciplines because it connects ancient history, ethics, literary analysis, and lived religious practice. Core concepts that recur throughout this area of study include the nature of the Lord, the role of the church, the significance of the temple, the experiences of the Israelites, and the relationship between the Old and New Testaments. Topics such as blood sacrifice, worship, and the power of evil give students entry points into both close textual reading and broader theological argument.

Papers in this subject take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on specific biblical narratives, such as the story of Gideon in Judges or King David's influence on Jerusalem, combining close reading with historical context. Others are comparative, setting Christianity alongside Islam, or tracing Egyptian influence on Judaism and Christianity, or examining the gods of Ancient Near Eastern religions alongside biblical accounts. Doctrinal and prophetic topics, such as the thousand-year reign of Christ, appear alongside applied essays on servant leadership in church settings and Christian worldview frameworks. Some writers move into contemporary ethical debates, using biblical sources to anchor arguments on issues like marriage.

A strong essay on a biblical topic needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of scripture. Evidence drawn from specific passages, grounded in careful attention to the text, carries more weight than general claims about the Bible's teachings. The most common pitfall is treating the Bible as a single uniform voice; acknowledging the diversity across books, authors, and testaments strengthens rather than weakens an argument.

282 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Encountering Jesus a Debate on Christology by Stephen T. Davis
How can so many people look into a portrait of a man, written by 4 different scholar and commoners who portray the man in very similar fashion, and come away with such diametrically opposing viewpoints that the man is…
Research Paper Doctorate
Death Penalty: Social Attitudes and Modern Alternatives
The issue of the death penalty raises deep emotions on all sides of the debate. Many feel that the death penalty no longer holds value as a tool for society to prevent heinous crimes.
Paper Undergraduate
Biblical Preaching Robinson, Haddon W. Biblical Preaching:
Robinson, Haddon W. Biblical Preaching: The Development and Delivery of Expository Messages. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2001.
Paper Undergraduate
How Bible Came to Were it Is Today
This paper investigates the history of the Bible. It begins with the first writings that were eventually collected into early Old Testament scripture, though it points out that the Torah was not formalized until 90 AD. It examines issues of translation, discussing common translation errors. It also focuses on how choices have changed the books in the Bible.
Paper Masters
Sudden infant death syndrome counseling approaches
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: A Treatment Plan
Paper Doctorate
Role of Women in the Church
¶ … defination of "elder" and "deacon," and the biblical requirements for each office. It then discusses whether a woman be an elder or a deacon. It concludes by outlining contributions women make to theology,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gregory VII Henry IV Boniface VIII Philip IV
Political Conflict between the Church and the State during the Middle Ages
Paper Undergraduate
Bible Esoteric and Dated. Fee and Stuart
Fee and Stuart in "How to Read the Bible for All Its Worth", show the applicability of the Bible and provide readers with the tools of applying the Bible to their contemporary lives. For them there is no "then and there" to the text, rather than "then and there" of the text can equitably be applied to the "here and now" of contemporaneous living. The authors in effect build two bridges; there is the bridge between Church and lay man and the bridge between Church and exegetical scholar. Whilst the exegetical scholar approaches the text from the past trying to see ‘what it meant", the author tell us that the text is far more than that: it is applicable not only for the "then" but also for the "now" and, therefore, people should approach it with the intent of ‘what does it mean" and "what will it mean". In other words, each of us, regardless of scholarly background, should connect the '''then and there' of the original text to the 'here and now' of our own life settings" (p. 10). The operative premise is that the texts of the living Word "mean what they meant" (p. 11).
Paper Masters
Giuliano Bugiardini and Roger Van Der Wyden
¶ … Giuliano Bugiardini and Roger Van Der Wyden
Research Paper Doctorate
Seven Deadly Sins in Marlowe's Doctor Faustus
¶ … Faustus, as Christopher Marlowe's character, is a German scholar who wants to exceed the limits of traditional logic, medicine, law and religion by practicing black magic. Through this, he calls upon Mephistopheles,…