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Christianity is one of the most widely studied religious traditions in academic settings, examined across disciplines including theology, history, philosophy, ethics, and anthropology. Courses in religious studies, world religions, ethics, and even business routinely ask students to engage with Christian thought, scripture, and practice. The tradition's foundational texts, particularly the Bible, along with its central figure of Jesus Christ and the broader concept of faith, generate substantial scholarly inquiry. The intellectual richness of Christianity — spanning questions of belief, morality, power, and identity — makes it a productive subject for academic analysis at every level.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are historical, examining events such as the Rhineland Massacres of 1096 and the role of religious identity in violence. Others are philosophical or literary, as seen in analyses of Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy. Several papers take a reflective or personal approach, applying Christian principles to lived experience, including struggles with anger or questions of faith in professional contexts like business ethics. Comparative work also appears, setting Christianity alongside traditions such as Confucianism or examining how Christian values intersect with broader cultural and political institutions.

A strong essay on Christianity benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond broad description toward a specific argument about faith, practice, scripture, or historical impact. Evidence drawn from biblical texts, theological frameworks, or documented historical events carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating Christianity as a monolithic tradition — acknowledging its internal diversity and historical development will make any argument significantly more credible.

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Paper Undergraduate
History of cardiovascular disease
Recent advances in genetic research methods have uncovered a large number of cardiovascular disease (CVD) susceptibility loci. Despite contributing to CVD prevalence, much of the inter-individual variation is not due to genetic factors. Mendelian CVD-associated traits tend to have a large effect, but occur so rarely that they contribute little to overall variation in CVD prevalence. In addition, common CVD-associated traits have small effect sizes and likewise contribute little. However, genetic CVD risk factors do contribute significantly to early onset disease and disease severity, if the genetic analysis is limited to distinct morphological locations in the proximal cardiovascular system. These research findings suggest CVD is a mosaic of multiple risk factors influencing disease manifestation by location.
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.
Paper Undergraduate
Theological Position of Dwight N. Hopkins
The biblical presentation of human existence and its origin and our own experience of human life in this world are to accept the fact that Adam and Eve were real persons and they are the descents of all human beings.
Research Paper Doctorate
Cyrano de Bergerac and Roxanne: Character comparison and dynamics
Cyrano and Charlie -- Roxanne in the 20th century
Research Paper Doctorate
Christian Counseling Book Review: Brown,
Brown, William P. (2002) Seeing the Psalms: A Theology of Metaphor. 2002.
Research Paper Doctorate
Biblical passages and interpretations
While replete with theological demands for life and moral requisites, very few passages in the Bible allow for open analysis of Jesus' own position in ethical politics. While the gospels proffer more opportunities for…
Research Paper Doctorate
Womanist Approach to Feminist Christology
An individual theologian's reflection about the nature of God is not strictly about God alone. Rather, it is intimately bound-up with the theologian's own way of viewing the world. One fairly recent example of this…
Paper Doctorate
Shapers and Definers Characteristic of Modernity it
Renaissance is seen as the era in European civilization after the middle ages and is generally accepted as having been characterized by a surge of interest in classical learning and values. During the renaissance, there emerged new discoveries, exploration of new continents, and substitution of the Copernican for the Ptolemaic system of astronomy, decline of the feudal system and the growth of commerce, and the invention of paper among others. To the scholars and thinkers of this time, renaissance was viewed as a time of the revival of classical learning and wisdom after a long period of cultural decline and stagnation. In this regard, this paper criticizes the characteristic of modernity as defined by Norman Davies.
Research Paper Doctorate
Science and philosophy: intersections and foundations
Science as Religion -- Objective? Or only one perspective amongst many perspectives?
Research Paper Doctorate
Cyrano de Bergerac
Edmond Rosstand never considered his play Cyrano de Bergerac to be about romantic love; however, from a different perspective it is due the fact Cyrano loves Roxanne. And., the fact that he tried to keep his feelings to…