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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
Apostle Paul's Apocalyptic Views: End Times & Resurrection
The major difference between the Apostle Paul and the other apostles is that Paul had not known Jesus while he was on earth as the Son of God. Paul's conversion occurred only after the Ascension.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Salem Witch Trials of 1692: Causes and Events
In the months of June to September 1692, nineteen men and women were hung near Salem Village, Massachusetts, for the crime of witchcraft. One man, Giles Corey, close to eighty years of age at the time of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger: Original vs. Edited
¶ … Mysterious Stranger" by Mark Twain. The version often studied in colleges is a heavily edited version of Mark Twain's original writing. This paper will research the differences in the original writing and the edited…
Research Paper Doctorate
Raymond Carver's Cathedral: Themes, Analysis, and Stories
An American writer Raymond Carver has been writing stories on a smaller emotional scale for few years that creates same effects. Mostly his story settings contain American towns, semi-industrial, which are mostly…
Paper Doctorate
Rhetorical Techniques: Ideals, Norms, and Moral Appeals
People use various rhetorical techniques in order to have an impact on their audience. Four of these are: (a) conveying a sense of their own reality by invoking ideals (b) reverting to cultural norms to teach a lesson /…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Symbolism and Justice in August Wilson's Fences
This play examines the use of symbolism in August Wilson's Fences, and argues that the symbols all correlate to the theme of injustice in Wilson's play. Baseball is used as a symbol of the injustice of segregation, but crucially the play's setting after baseball segregation has ended does not fill the protagonist, Troy Maxson, with gratitude, but bitterness. As a result Troy perpetuates the injustice against his own son, when the boy is offered a football scholarship. Finally the most expansive symbol in the play--that of the injured Gabe and his belief that he must use his trumped to announce the Last Judgment--demonstrates, in the play's conclusion, that Wilson's purpose is to ask us to imagine a transcendent justice, in which the wrongs done against Troy, and the wrongs done by him, can be evaluated in the context of history.
Research Paper Doctorate
Aquinas's Five Ways: Reason, Faith, and Their Limits
Aquinas and His "Five Ways," an Expression of Assumed Faith
Paper Doctorate
Edgar Allan Poe's Influence on Alfred Hitchcock's Films
This paper discusses and compares the work of Alfred Hitchcock with the work of Edgar Allen Poe and how Poe has influenced what some may say the greatest director/film maker of all time. It discusses how Poe and Hitchcock share similar fears and obsessions and how the effectively translated them to famous work.
Paper Doctorate
Slave Narratives and the Civil Rights Era: Moody and Malcolm X
¶ … slave narrative maintains a unique station in modern literature. Unlike any other body of literature, it provides us with a first-hand account of institutional racially-motivated human bondage in an ostensibly…
Research Paper Doctorate
Chivalry and Mortality in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Chivalry in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight