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Faith
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Faith is a foundational concept in religious studies, theology, and philosophy of religion, examined across courses ranging from introductory world religions to advanced divinity programs. It sits at the intersection of belief, reason, and lived experience, making it intellectually rich and contested. Students encounter faith not only as a personal or spiritual matter but as a force that shapes institutions, communities, and entire worldviews. Because faith operates across traditions — including Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism — and intersects with culture, politics, and history, it invites rigorous academic analysis rather than purely devotional treatment.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a broad range of approaches. Some take a theological or doctrinal angle, examining confessions of faith, Protestant roots, or Christian worldview frameworks. Others pursue historical and comparative analysis, looking at ancient Buddhism, classical-period societies, or Islamic monuments through an art-historical lens. Contextual and cultural approaches appear as well, with papers exploring religious culture in Korea, Mormon community programs, and missionary commissions such as those of Luther Rice and Adoniram Judson. Reflective and applied writing also features prominently, connecting faith to personal development and the study of secular literature.

A strong essay on faith requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing something specific about how faith functions, evolves, or conflicts within a defined tradition, period, or community. Evidence drawn from primary texts, historical records, or well-documented case studies carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating faith as self-explanatory; successful papers define what faith means in the specific context under examination before building any broader argument around it.

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Paper Undergraduate
Homosexuality: definitions, history, and contemporary perspectives
Homosexuality and the Bible: Gen 1:28 and Exegesis
Research Paper Undergraduate
Thomas Jefferson Calls for Religious
Thomas Jefferson Calls for Religious Freedom in Virginia (1786)
Research Paper Undergraduate
William Carey Biography at One
At one time, "Carey's pathway was pockmarked with crises." Traditionally, however, Carey is usually "portrayed as a 'heroic' character - as one of a class of big, ordinary people who do not resign themselves to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Christ in a Consumer Society
John F. Kavanaugh tells the truth about many things in modern society, including how corporations are constantly attacking the average individual with a barrage of marketing campaigns.
Paper Undergraduate
European history overview and key developments
What of the Italian Renaissance has remained a part of the modern world, as it differs from the medieval world prior to the Renaissance?
Paper Undergraduate
Kierkegaard on Camus Albert Camus\'s
Albert Camus's the Stranger, though a novel on the surface, can also be read as a philosophical treatise of sorts. Its depiction of Mersault, the indifferent and apparently passionless man who doesn't cry at his mother'…
Essay Doctorate
African-American Odyssey Through the Reasoned and Systematic
Through the reasoned and systematic analysis presented in Martin & Malcom & America: A Dream or a Nightmare, author James H. Cone investigates the fundamental philosophical contrasts between the ideas espoused by the…
Thesis Doctorate
The Baptism Debate
This paper provides a review of the relevant peer-reviewed and scholarly literature concerning different views about the purpose and merits of baptism, and whether baptism is reserved for believers only or for infants as well. In addition, a discussion concerning what mode of baptism is biblical is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Paper Undergraduate
Introduction to the New Testament
This paper analyzes the continuity of themes of Passover, desert, law and death in the Old and New Testaments. Christ's sacrifice on the cross continues the theme of the Passover (and begins on the feast of the Passover). It is prepared for by fasting in the desert (just as Moses leads his people through the desert) where they receive a new lasw.
Essay Masters
Drama Analysis Dr. Faustus and Streetcar Named Desire
The paper considers Marlowe's Faust and Williams' Blanche DuBois in terms of the "everyman" concept. The idea of "everyman" is described and discussed, after which it is applied to both characters. The suggestion is that both characters are "everyman" representations of their respective time periods, but can also translate as such characters for today's audiences.