Essay Topic Hub

Jesus
Essays

1,700+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,700 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Jesus of Nazareth is one of the most studied figures in the academic world, examined across religious studies, theology, history, and literature courses. Students write about him because his life, teachings, death, and reception raise foundational questions about faith, culture, and historical method. Works like Mark Allan Powell's Jesus as a Figure in History and Donald Kraybill's exploration of an upside-down kingdom give students frameworks for approaching Jesus through both scholarly and theological lenses. The concept of the messiah, Jewish expectations surrounding that term, and the development of early Christianity through figures like Paul all make this topic rich with analytical possibility across the New Testament and beyond.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Comparative essays place Jesus alongside Mohammed to examine parallel lives and religious legacies. Historical-critical papers focus on the quest for the historical Jesus, weighing textual and archaeological evidence such as the fishing boat from the Sea of Galilee. Literary and narrative approaches analyze the parables or apply interpretive frameworks drawn from works on how literature communicates meaning. Other papers take a cultural and anthropological angle, as seen in work connecting Jesus to indigenous corn mother traditions, while course-driven assignments address Christianity's spread through centuries of changing interpretation.

A strong essay on Jesus requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing about one aspect of his life, historical significance, or theological reception rather than attempting a broad biography. Evidence drawn from primary sources like the Bible alongside credible scholarly commentary carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating devotional claims with historical argument; strong academic writing distinguishes between what sources assert and what evidence supports.

1,700 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Jesus, Was He a Revolutionary?
¶ … Oscar Cullmann, Nolan, and Genezio Boff. Oscar Cullmann can be described as a Christian theologian within the Lutheran tradition. His most notable work involved the ecumenical movement.
Essay Undergraduate
Entries in the Bible Dictionary Person Place and Book
The central figure in the New Testament of Christianity is Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus in many ways has both historical and spiritual natures, due to his being born to a typical Jewish family (father Joseph and mother…
Essay Undergraduate
Christians and Environmental Stewardship
¶ … teach stewardship principles in the Church?
Research Paper Doctorate
Importance of Parables in Jesus Teachings
¶ … centrality of the parables in Jesus teaching
Thesis Doctorate
Healthcare Providers and Religion
Spiritual care in the past was not considered to be a part of medicine. However, over time both holistic nursing and the health movement have become increasingly involved with the assessment of the patient's religious…
Thesis Doctorate
Stages of Grief in Books
Wolterstorff is able to find joy after his loss in more than one way. Specifically, the author was actually able to transition through the various stages of grieving as outlined by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross.
Paper Doctorate
Lament for a Son
The author of this report is asked to analyze and assess the work Lament For a Son as authored by Wolterstorff. Indeed, the author of that treatise exemplifies and shows the five stages of grief as defined and described…
Thesis Undergraduate
Christian Worldviews and Biblical Tenets
¶ … worldview is a "mental model of reality -- a framework of ideas & attitudes about the world, ourselves, and life, a comprehensive system of beliefs," (Rusbult, n.d.). Each person views the world through the lenses…
Thesis Masters
Synoptic Gospels of Bible
¶ … synoptic problem" and explain how the 2-source theory provides a solution for it.
Paper Doctorate
Storytelling in Different Cultures
¶ … storytelling in the cultures we studied in the past four weeks using the artworks below as examples of the Egyptian, Islamic, and Early Christian societies' modes for depicting stories.