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Exegesis
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Exegesis is the close, critical interpretation of a text — most commonly a biblical passage — with the goal of uncovering its original meaning, literary context, and theological significance. It appears most frequently in courses tied to religious studies, theology, seminary training, and literature programs that treat sacred texts as literary artifacts. What makes exegesis academically compelling is the demand it places on a writer to move between historical context, linguistic analysis, and faith traditions simultaneously, producing interpretation that is both rigorous and meaningful. Texts from across both Testaments attract this kind of scrutiny, with passages addressing themes of life, faith, love, and the power of Christ drawing particular scholarly attention.

The papers archived on this topic range widely in their approaches. Many focus on individual passages or chapters — from Ezekiel, Hosea, Ecclesiastes, the Psalms, and letters such as Philippians, Hebrews, and 2 Corinthians — and perform close readings that unpack verse-by-verse meaning. Others take a comparative angle, as in work that sets Mark 8 against parallel accounts in Matthew and Luke. Some essays engage historical and denominational frameworks, such as examinations of pre-modern exegesis of Genesis in relation to traditional Catholic interpretation. Applied approaches also appear, connecting ancient passages to contemporary life and faith practice.

A strong exegesis essay establishes a clearly bounded passage and argues a specific interpretive claim rather than summarizing content. Evidence drawn from the text itself — word choice, structure, narrative context — carries the most weight, ideally supported by engagement with relevant translations or scholarly commentary. The most common pitfall is treating exegesis as paraphrase; the goal is interpretation with a defensible thesis, not retelling what the passage says.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Exegesis Romans 4:1-25 the Context
The context of this passage is essential to its understanding both during the time it was written and to contemporary readers. Though this passage mentions only Abraham and quotes liberally from the Old Testament…
Essay Doctorate
Hermeneutics Mary Hinkle Shore and Sandra Hack
This is a three-page essay on alternative hermeneutical methods. The essay is built on two articles: Polaski, S. H. Identifying the unnamed disciple: An exercise in reader-response criticism; and Shore, M.E.H. People like us: Minor characters in Matthew's passion. These two articles are discussed, their respective hermeneutical approaches analyzed in terms of how effective they are.
Research Paper Doctorate
Judaism Early Jewish Thought --
Early Jewish thought -- the development of Midrash, Mishnah, Talmud, and Gemara
Research Paper Undergraduate
exegeting hebrews
One of the most noteworthy things about the Letter to the Hebrews is that its authorship is unknown. While anonymous authorship is not exactly unusual for books in the Bible, it is somewhat unusual given the context of…
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.
Paper Undergraduate
Rieslings a Drink for All
An analysis of New York, French, and German Rieslings.
Essay Doctorate
Exegesis of Psalm 142 Is Complaint Against
This paper offers a verse-by-verse exegetical reading of Psalm 142, focusing on its specific nature as a Psalm of lament. The paper explores the question of whether complaint against God is in some way a valid form of prayer--the text of Psalm 142 suggests that it is. The exegetical reading is ultimately considered in light of the situation in which the Psalm was composed (described in I Samuel 21-22) and offers a traditional interpretation which sees Psalm 142 as a prefiguration of Christ.
Research Paper Doctorate
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond
Book of Revelation: Looking Beyond Revelation is could easily be considered the most controversial book in the New Testament; if not the entire Bible itself. Many have tried in vain to understand what the book is trying…
Research Paper Doctorate
Matthew 16:13-20 While the Confession
While the confession of Peter is found in all three of synoptic gospels (Matthew 16:13-20, Mark 8:27-30, Luke 9:18-21), the Book of Matthew offers the gospel center of the Galilean ministry.
Essay Doctorate
John 15 an Exegesis of John 15:1-27
This paper provides an exegesis of John 15:1-27. This section of the Gospel of John relates Christ's talk during the Last Supper, in which He speaks of union with God and the treatment that His disciples can expect from the world. Finally, it ends with the fact that God will send the Holy Ghost to help His disciples.