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God
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What is God?

The concept of God sits at the center of theological, philosophical, and humanistic inquiry, making it one of the most broadly studied subjects across religious studies, philosophy, and literature courses. Essays on this topic engage with foundational questions about existence, faith, and the nature of divine being. Students are drawn to it because it bridges abstract reasoning and lived human experience, appearing in scriptural analysis, ethical frameworks, and even discussions of mythology. Works and texts that surface repeatedly in this area include the Bible, the writings of C. S. Lewis, and narratives from both Christian and non-Christian traditions, each offering distinct entry points into questions about who or what God is and how that understanding shapes human life.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some pursue philosophical argument, directly examining the existence of God through logic and reason. Others apply literary or comparative analysis, such as weighing characters like Maheo and God across different cultural stories, or reading Flannery O'Connor's fiction through a theological lens. Doctrinal and scriptural close-reading is also common, with papers focusing on specific biblical passages, figures like Melchizedek, the miracles of Jesus, or the significance of narratives in Genesis. A smaller set of papers connects theological ideas to ethics, history, or human experience more broadly.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of belief. Evidence drawn from primary texts — scripture, literary works, or philosophical arguments — carries the most weight and should be cited closely. The most common pitfall is conflating personal belief with analytical argument; even when writing about faith, the essay should engage critically with concepts, sources, and competing interpretations.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Adventures of a Pincushion
Mary Ann Kilner & the Adventures of a Pincushion" (1780) meets theories of Mary Wollstonecraft, early feminist and author
Research Paper Doctorate
Jubilee/Margaret Walker Margaret Walker: A Creative Survivor
Jubilee was the crowning an achievement of Margaret Walker's career. A sprawling novel about Civil War-era blacks, the novel is simultaneously a preservation of Walker's family history and a historically accurate…
Research Paper Doctorate
Taking a Chance on God by Mcneil
John McNeill's book, Taking a Chance on God, is that a gay identity is fully compatible with a rich Christian faith. McNeill argues that the church's rejection of homosexuality is based on a pathological relationship…
Research Paper Doctorate
Strength in Themes of Modernist Poetry Things
Things fall apart, the center cannot hold," wrote Yeats of the modern, human condition. Yeats later poetic vision highlights a central notion in much of modern poetic philosophy, namely that the old ideological and…
Research Paper Doctorate
Moliere's works and literary significance
Tartuffe (Hypocrite) became public in the year 1664 for the first time as a three act play that, when produced, attracted unfavorable denigration from religious factions. In this paper, I am going to analyze the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Diary of Bevenda Cherokee
¶ … Dieri, Bevenda, Cherokee structures of religious belief and touch upon tribal beliefs about god and gods, key myths and rituals
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics the Divine Command Theory of Morality
The Divine Command theory of morality is known as a nonconsequentialist theory because this particular theory of morality is one that is not in any way based on the consequences or outcomes of specific action, but…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Exegesis of Jeremiah 1 Verses 1-10
Jeremiah, the son of Hikiah was a priest who lived close to the city of Jerusalem in the town of Anathoth. An important religious writing is represented by the book who bears his name.
Essay Doctorate
Western Attitudes Toward Islam in the Fourteenth Through Sixteenth Centuries
This paper examines the difference in attitude toward Islamic domination of eastern territories, as expressed by William of Adam in the early 14th century and Martin Luther in the early 16th century. The difference in attitude is explained by the rapid rise of the Ottoman empire---at the time William of Adam was writing, Constantinople was still a Christian city; by Luther's day, Constantinople was the seat of the Ottoman Empire which was extending its military conquests as far north and west as Vienna.
Research Paper Doctorate
argument from scripture
Argument from Scripture: God's existence cannot be proven by the presence of the concept of God within the text of the Holy Scriptures