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Jerusalem
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Jerusalem occupies a singular place in religious studies because it functions simultaneously as a historical city, a theological symbol, and a contested sacred space for multiple faith traditions. Courses in biblical studies, world religions, church history, and Jewish studies all return to Jerusalem as a central subject because understanding it is inseparable from understanding Christianity, Judaism, and the broader history of monotheistic religion. Its presence throughout the Old and New Testaments, its role in the life of early Christians and Jewish communities, and its significance as the site of the Temple make it one of the most layered topics a religion student can explore.

Papers on this topic approach Jerusalem from several distinct angles. Some focus on its biblical foundations, tracing the city's role through the Old Testament or examining specific texts such as the Gospel of Luke. Others take a historical perspective, analyzing figures like King David or investigating events such as the First Crusade and Pope Urban II's call to reclaim the city. Comparative and thematic approaches also appear, including studies of Jewish affairs in Jerusalem, the composition of the Mishnah, and how early Christian identity was shaped by its relationship to the city and the Temple.

A strong essay on Jerusalem requires a clearly bounded thesis — addressing the city as a whole across all periods is too broad. Evidence drawn from primary sources, including biblical texts and historical accounts, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Jerusalem as either purely symbolic or purely political without acknowledging how deeply those dimensions are intertwined in the scholarship.

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Thesis Doctorate
John 5 1 9
At first glance the text of John 5:1-9 is relatively simple and straightforward: Jesus is again in Jerusalem for a festival, and he stops by a pool that has healing properties. There he meets a sick old man who has been…
Paper Undergraduate
Exegesis of John 4: 6-14
Exegesis of John 4: 6-14 and John 12: 20 -26
Research Paper Doctorate
Innovative Mentoring Creating Innovation Within
Creating innovation within jobs can be difficult in some career tracks. In government work, for instance, a person may have to work within rules that affect not only his or her department but the other departments…
Thesis Doctorate
Daniel 9 24 27
This paper gives an exegesis of Daniel 9:24-27, examining the three principal interpretations of the text as well as others that have arisen over time. It concludes with an explanation of why a synthesis of the traditional and the eschatological views provides the most comprehensive reading of the text in terms of fulfillment.
Thesis Doctorate
William Foxwell Albright and his archaeological contributions
This paper examines the career of William F. Albright and shows it influenced his belief in Christianity and not how his religion affected his scientific inquiry, as his critics have attempted to show. Albright's study of Biblical archeology presented to evidence that the claims of the Bible were true and therefore part of history.
Essay Doctorate
Reactions to Tibetan Buddhism, Shintoism, and related texts
This Asian religious studies paper deals with a series of ideas concerning the "Tibetan Book of the Dead", Shintoism, and Yui-en's writing Tannisho. The essay contains three one and a half-part reactions meant to emphasize the writer's understanding of the ideas present in the Tibetan book, the conversation between Yui-en and his teacher, and the Shinto films.
Research Paper Doctorate
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
¶ … Germany reunify? What caused this to happen?
Research Paper Doctorate
Intifada on December 9, 1987,
On December 9, 1987, 1.5 million Palestinian Arabs living in areas conquered and occupied by Israel after the Six-Day war in 1967 began an uprising (Goell, 1989). Called the "intifada," and later the "first intifada,"…
Paper Doctorate
The Crusades before 1600
Understanding The Crusades is an endeavor which requires a great deal of courage, as it means looking at one of the darkest parts of history with honesty and realism. The Crusades were not an attempt to Christianize Muslims, but to slaughter them. Thus, the task in comprehending The Crusades means trying to understand why and how human beings are capable of such evil.
Paper High School
Fall of the Roman Empire Due to Christianity
The research paper first makes a brief general overview of the ancient Roman Empire mainly looking at its' leadership structure, division of regions, senatorial and equestrian order in the empire, the religious history…