Essay Topic Hub

Bible
Essays

2,425+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,425 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

The Bible is one of the most studied texts across multiple academic disciplines, including theology, religious studies, history, literature, and ethics. Students engage with it both as a sacred scripture and as a historical and literary document, making it a subject of rigorous scholarly inquiry. Its two major divisions — the Old Testament and the New Testament — raise distinct interpretive questions about authorship, context, canon, and meaning. Courses in Christian worldview, biblical hermeneutics, and church history regularly assign essays that ask students to analyze specific passages, evaluate theological claims, or situate biblical texts within broader cultural and historical frameworks.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus on close textual analysis of specific passages, such as the Daniel 9 prophecy or the flood narrative in Genesis, debating whether interpretations should be Christological or historically grounded. Others examine applied ethics, exploring what biblical teaching means for issues like divorce in Christian life. Historical and cultural approaches appear in essays on the Incarnation, while Roman Catholic theological interpretation receives attention as a distinct hermeneutical tradition. Some papers engage figures like William Apess to explore how biblical arguments have been used in social and racial contexts.

A strong essay on the Bible requires a clearly scoped thesis — broad claims about what "the Bible says" rarely hold up under scrutiny. Evidence should draw on specific verses, named books, and credible commentary rather than general assertion. Students should also engage seriously with interpretive method, since the same passage can support very different conclusions depending on the hermeneutical framework applied. The most common pitfall is treating the Bible as a uniform text without accounting for the distinct literary genres, historical contexts, and theological traditions each book represents.

2,425 papers
Sort by:
Paper High School
Atonement vs. Romeo and Juliet
Romeo and Juliet has always been one of William Shakespeare's most popular and successful plays, even though critics have sometimes dismissed it as an immature or sentimental work. In that respect, Atonement is not sentimental at all but rather grimly realistic, although the love of Ronnie and Cecelia also ends tragically. Both the play and novel have a great deal of seemingly irrational and senseless violence that destroys the lives of the main characters. In Atonement, the violence takes the form of a system that convicts Robbie unjustly of a crime he did not commit, and then gives him a choice of either serving in a war as cannon fodder or staying in jail. Cecilia and Briony also experience the violence of wartime London with regular bombing and endless numbers of badly mangled bodies that flood into the hospitals where they work. In Romeo and Juliet, the violence is the endless feud between the Monatgue's and Capulet's, in which Romeo kills Tybalt in retaliation for the death of his friend Mercutio. Great Britain in 1935 was not nearly as repressive and patriarchal as the Italy of the 17th Century which is the setting for Romeo and Juliet. Women had won the right to vote by that time, and were beginning to attend universities or work outside the home, as Cecelia and Briony Tallis did. Unlike Juliet, they were not being forced into arranged marriages contracted by their father, who actually seems indifferent to them.
Essay Doctorate
Secular Humanism and Christianity
Secular humanism, a worldview that celebrates man's capacity for rationality, suggests that the scientific disciplines explain the origin of the universe and life on Earth. Humanists embrace the scientific method and…
Paper Doctorate
Intergenerational Relationships in Identity Construction
This thesis examines the work of Nafisa Haji in order to see how the process of identity formation is affected by intergenerational conflict and reconciliation. Haji's books focus on Pakistani-American women who come to discover more about their heritage than they previously knew, leading to a reevaluation of their own identities. Ultimately Haji's work suggests that successful identity formation in the wake of colonization requires close intergenerational bonds and communication.
Paper Undergraduate
Prayer and Faith in Habakkuk
The paper considers the book of Habakkuk and how the prophet grew from a bitter, complaining person to a maturely faithful man. Ultimately, he was able to praise God despite, rather than because of, his external circumstances. This is a major lesson today's faithful person can learn. Mature faith is developed through long and often painful experience.
Research Paper Doctorate
Philosophy of Ministry
History shows that in the course of vast resurgence and large arousing, religious sections have grown. These sections have become more and more planned and prearranged as time passed by.
Research Paper Doctorate
St. Augustine and the Buddha a Comparison
Were St. Augustine and the Buddha to have a conversation, they might find their points-of-view quite interesting. Of course, Augustine might feel a bit inconvenienced by having to crouch down under a bodhi tree, but…
Essay Doctorate
Biblical Coexistence of Dinosaurs and Man
Are there dinosaurs in the Bible? And if there are, what does it means about spiritual and divine meanings of the past of humans? These issues are explored and some problems are discussed regarding issues such as the age of the planet, fossils and the length of a day of Creation.
Research Paper Doctorate
Prophets in Speech We Often
In speech we often use terms "sovereign" and "sovereignty" in reference to politics, as we associate them with power, authority and rulership. In King James Version of Bible these words are never used.
Research Paper Doctorate
Why Genesis 1 11 May Be Considered Accurate History
¶ … Genesis of the Bible is the sovereignty of God throughout the four events described in the first 11 chapters: the creation, the fall, the flood and the Babel dispersion. In the next chapters, up to chapter 50, there…
Research Paper Doctorate
Women in Douglass Still Bound
Still Bound to Notions of the Separate Spheres and Roles of Men and Women: Frederick Douglass My Life in Bondage