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Jesus
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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.

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Paper Undergraduate
Jesus parables and their theological significance
The words of Jesus serve as the message of God, even today outside of their historical context. Jesus used parables to relate the more complex and abstract message of God to the people in simpler, more understandable…
Paper Undergraduate
Historical Jesus: life, teachings, and scholarly interpretations
Jesus is well-known as a religious figure, but what do we know of his real existence within a historical context? Unfortunately, ancient sources outside the context of canonical literature prove scarce and ambiguous.
Paper Undergraduate
Cool Hand Christ the World
The world of cinema is full of Christ figures, some more obvious than others. Christ himself has been portrayed in many movies -- leading to no small amount of controversy -- from many different perspectives.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mona Lisa Conspiracy Few People
Few people in the civilized world would fail to recognize the famous Mona Lisa in a painting replica or a print. Most of those people would also be able to name Leonardo Da Vinci as the artist that placed her on the…
Paper Doctorate
Santeria Origin of and Introduction
Santeria is one of the oldest and richest religious traditions born in the New World. A fusion of Catholicism and the indigenous African religion Iba, Santeria literally means "the way of saints." According to Robinson…
Paper Doctorate
God\'s Holiness Doctrinal Essential I
I saw the Lord seated on a throne, high and exalted, and the train of his robe filled the temple. Above him were seraphs, . . . And they were calling to one another:
Paper Doctorate
Nikos Kazantzakis' treatment of freedom and death in literature
Captain Michalis, the hero of Freedom or Death, was based on Kazantzakis' father Michalis, a traditional Cretan community leader and warrior in the independence struggles who fought in the 1888-89 rebellion. He also introduces the Captain's best friend Nuri Bey and his wife Emine, who he also loves, but in the end he rejects them both in the cause of Cretan independence. The Pasha and the Metropolitan also symbolize the ancient clash of religions, cultures and civilizations that is fought out in this novel—Greek versus Turk, Christian versus Muslim—which also resonates with the contemporary word and the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. These ethnic, tribal and nationalistic hatreds are so great and so enduring that they crowd out all romance, friendship or personal feelings, as all the characters join in the bloodbath. Only Nuri Bey commits suicide rather than go to war against his former friend, but the Captain is totally committed to the Greek cause and quite willing to die for it, taking most of his friends and relatives with him.
Essay High School
Thomas R. Dew Defends Slavery 1852
A critical analysis of the 1852 argument of Thomas R. Dew outlining what he believed to be a logical justification for the continuation of the noxious institution of American Slavery that precipitated the Civil War a decade after its writing. In explains why the piece stands as a remarkable demonstration of myopic, self-centered, immoral rationalization that is breathtaking in the presumptuousness of its purported rationale.
Paper High School
Christian Symbolism in \"The Old
Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea" is certainly one of the most complex novels produced by the American writer. The story involves several episodes, each of them focused on the fisherman as he interacts with…
Paper Masters
Racial/Ethnic Group Comparison and Contrast:
The Screwtape Letters, The Great Divorce and The Problem of Pain