Essay Topic Hub

Sermon
Essays

300+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

300 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

The sermon is one of the oldest forms of religious discourse, functioning simultaneously as theological instruction, moral exhortation, and communal ritual. Students engage with sermons across courses in religious studies, theology, American history, and literature, where the genre raises questions about authority, interpretation, and the relationship between scripture and lived experience. The sermon's ability to translate sacred texts — including the Gospels, the Psalms, and the Epistles of John — into practical guidance for everyday life makes it a rich site of academic inquiry. Works such as John Winthrop's foundational address and John Witherspoon's "The Dominion of Providence Over the Passions" illustrate how sermons have shaped political and social thought beyond strictly religious contexts.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on close textual analysis, examining how specific biblical passages such as Psalm 51 or Matthew 6:25–34 are interpreted and applied within a sermon's argument. Others take a historical or cultural angle, tracing the development of Black preaching traditions and the redemptive role of the Black church from the Civil War era to the present. Comparative papers explore doctrinal questions — such as the relationship between grace and belief, or the core ideas of Calvinism — by setting sermon texts against broader theological frameworks.

A strong essay on sermons should establish a clear thesis about how a particular sermon constructs meaning, persuades its audience, or reflects its historical moment. Primary textual evidence drawn directly from the sermon itself carries the most weight. A common pitfall is summarizing a sermon's content without analyzing its rhetorical or theological choices — always move from description toward interpretation.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Gnosticism and Earlier Christian Texts
Early Christian polemicists such as Clement of Alexandria, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus of Lyons, and Tertullian all attacked Gnosticism as ‘heresy' and until the 20th Century virtually nothing was known about it except in the distorted texts they had written. Their purpose was to construct the boundaries between what later became ‘orthodox' or ‘catholic' Christianity in opposition to Judaism, paganism and carious Christian ‘heresies'. Until the fourth and fifth centuries, however, when Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire under "the guiding influence of the Christian emperors" like Constantine and Theodosius, Christian ‘orthodoxy' was still fluid and in dispute. Only because of the power of the Roman state did Christianity become a "monolithic unity" that had not existed before and redefined "manifold ancient religious practices into three mutually exclusive groups: Jews, Christians and pagans (King 22). Early Christian polemicists deliberately exaggerated the differences between these groups and minimized the similarities, although for the first three centuries of Christianity no commonly recognized hierarchy or Scriptural canon existed.
Research Paper Doctorate
History concepts and applications
¶ … Colonial Culture Before the American Revolution
Thesis Undergraduate
What Is the Role of the Holy Spirit in the Proclamation of Scripture?
This paper focuses on the holy spirit in relation to proclamation of scripture. It reveals from several resources, most of which are books, as well as bible verses, the use of proclamation of scripture to instill the belief of the Holy Spirit and what might occur during such act. The paper includes an instance where a pastor maybe uncertain of inviting the Holy Spirit into his homiletical and proclamation process of a sermon.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gross and Falk Women\'s Experience of Their
Women's experience of their individual religious life is often left in the shadows when discussing the progress, or purpose of religion. In a world which has become particularly androcentric, a woman's perspective on…
Research Paper Masters
Clash of cultures: conflict and coexistence
This paper examines the "clash of cultures" between Puritans and Native Americans in the colonial period of US History. It uses the idea of the "captivity narrative"--with specific reference to the 1682 example written by Mary Rowlandson--as a way of approaching the question of Puritan cultural self-definition. The paper discusses Puritan religious belief as the key to understanding the Puritan approach to the "heathens" of the New World.
Paper Undergraduate
Comparison of Religious Ethics Throughout Denominations of Religious Doctrines
The three religions critiqued and reviewed in this paper are Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam. The point of the paper is to compare the ethical values and considerations of those three. In the process the paper highlights each faith's ethical values based on the literature. While there is a great deal of contrast between the three, there also are many similarities in terms of how life should be led and how ethical believers should be.
Paper High School
Gospels Compare and Contrast the Religious, Political,
This paper addresses a series of short and long answer questions on issues pertaining to the synoptic gospels (the Gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke). The perspective of this paper is academic rather than religiously oriented. Issues such as dating, the history of ancient Israel, and the different presentations of Jesus in the gospels are addressed.
Research Paper Doctorate
Chaucer's Pardoner: Hypocrisy and Irony in Canterbury Tales
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales On The Pardoner Character Palucas
Research Paper Doctorate
Dante Machiavelli Bhagavad Gita
The ethics of the epic quest, as expressed in Homer's "Iliad" and "Odyssey," to take just two examples of nationalist and epic heroic sagas, are ultimately justifications of cultural dominance of a particular ruling…
Paper Doctorate
Preaching in A, Insightful, Graduate Level, I
This paper provides a critical analysis of Preaching by Craddock (1985). Craddock's book provides a guide for self-improvement for the preacher as well as practical advice about structuring sermons, finding texts to talk about every week, and special occasional preaching. Its intended audience encompasses both experienced ministers as well as divinity school students.