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Moses
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Moses stands as one of the most significant figures in religious history, appearing centrally in the Old Testament and the Pentateuch as the leader who guided the Israelites out of Egypt. Students encounter Moses across theology, religious studies, literature, and even history courses, where his story raises compelling questions about prophecy, law, liberation, and moral leadership. His narrative intersects with textual scholarship on the Bible, making him academically rich as both a historical subject and a symbol whose meaning has shifted across centuries and cultures.

The papers archived on this topic approach Moses from several distinct angles. Literary analysis features prominently, particularly through Zora Neale Hurston's Moses, Man of the Mountain, which reimagines his story through an African American cultural lens. Historical and biographical approaches examine the background of the Old Testament and the Pentateuch to contextualize his life and death within ancient Egypt and Israelite tradition. Other papers treat Moses as a symbolic figure, as seen in the comparison between Harriet Tubman and Moses, and in discussions of Old Testament heroes viewed in both positive and negative light. The philosopher Maimonides also appears, connecting Moses to later theological interpretation.

A strong essay on Moses benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one framework — literary, theological, historical, or comparative — rather than trying to cover his entire story. Evidence drawn from biblical texts, scholarly commentary on the Pentateuch, or close reading of literary retellings tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Moses as a flat symbol without engaging the specific source texts that give his portrayal its complexity.

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Paper Doctorate
Ancient Jewish Weddings in Ancient Jewish Custom
The Biblical New Testament book of Luke is rife with parables given by Jesus to His disciples and to others (mainly religious leaders after the disciples). In one of these Christ describes how a bride's father seats the guests after the wedding has occurred during the feast. He talks about the fisrt being last and the last being first. This essay describes the customs of th Jewish wedding from ancient times to the present (orthodox).
Research Paper Doctorate
Managing change in organisations
Radical Change Management Processes in Organizations
Essay Doctorate
Exegesis of 2 Corinthians 12:1-10 with annotated bibliography
This paper is an exegesis on Paul's second letter to the Corinthians, Chapter 12, verses 1-10. The paper examines the context of Paul's letter in this chapter and verses and their surface and deeper meanings to the Corinthian people. Using Paul's previous letter to the Corinthians as a starting point and examples from older Biblical heroes of the Old Testament, the true meaning behind Paul's letter is revealed.
Research Paper Doctorate
What Americans Thought of the Roosevelts During the Depression
¶ … Americans Think about President and Mrs. Roosevelt: What can you learn from these letters about the writers' impressions of the president and his wife? What do they expect or hope the president or his wife will do?
Research Paper Undergraduate
William Faulkner (1897-1962) Is Known
William Faulkner (1897-1962) is known in the world of literature as the "historian of the negative" and narrator of the dark. In other words, Faulkner was obsessed with the dark side of human mind and in his in-depth…
Paper Undergraduate
Gilgamesh versus Old Testament heroes: comparative analysis
Both of these heroic figures go on quests or epic journeys in their stories. Moses leads his people across the desert from Egypt to Israel, while Gilgamesh's quest is to seek life forever after his friend Enkidu dies.
Research Paper Doctorate
Judaism and Christianity: historical origins and theological traditions
Judaism is all about the religion and the culture of the Jews, or the Jewish people all over the world, whose religion is one of the earliest recorded monotheistic faiths of the world, which in other words means that…
Paper Doctorate
Female elements in Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison
Abstract Wile Sula is the most moving of Morrison's works for me, I have found myself coming back over and over to Song of Solomon: first, for the fierce wisdom of Pilate, which I wrote on in Listening to Our Bodies; then for the wisdom and clarity and originality of Morrison's analysis of masculine archetypes and how they underlie men's individuation; and finally, for lessons about women's life stages, since the novel gives a cross section of women on the boundary line of passages into various new life stages (Smith, 1995). Like her other novels, Morrison's Song of Solomon crosses several generations; the major action of the novel takes place when all the women have grown middle-aged or old. Although this novel develops in depth Morrison's vision of masculine archetypes, the portraits of the women are as strong and compelling as her more centrally feminine previous novels; as Gloria Snodgrass Malone says, "men [are] more prominent in this novel, but women bear the brunt of suffering." The female figures are for me more memorable than the males. And although the novel's protagonist is male, he is finally redeemed by the strength and spirituality of several women in his family and the witch figure Circe, whom he meets on his journey South. Milkman is thirty-one when this happens (Cowart, 1990). The older women in his family are his mother, Ruth, sixty-two, and his aunt, Pilate, sixty-eight; these women comprise the portraits of women in the last stage of life, well past middle age. His sisters, Corinthians and Lena, are forty-two and forty-three respectively, thus moving into middle-age during the last section of the novel, as does Reba, Pilate's daughter, although her age is never actually given. Hagar, Milkman's cousin and lover, dies at thirty-six, apparently unable and unwilling to move towards middle-age. But before examining the women's life stages in depth, we need to set the stage with Morrison's development of masculine archetypes (Novak).
Essay Doctorate
Jews and Jewish Religion Judaism Is One
Judaism is one of the revealed religions of the world and like Islam and Christianity; this religion also endorses the concept of monotheism. Being one of the oldest monotheist religions, Judaism has a long history but…
Paper Doctorate
Jewish Humor Sigmund Freud Understood
Sigmund Freud understood that jokes speak the language of the unconscious mind. The trigger point of laughter starts from impulses buried deep, stemming from ancestral memories. It was Freud who recognized and…