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:
Paper Undergraduate
Deuteronomy 7:1-11 the Fifth Book
The fifth book of the Pentateuch, or Jewish Torah is known as Deuteronomy, translated from the Hebrew word Devarim, which means "things or words." Most of the material inside Deuteronomy consists of a series of lessons…
Paper Undergraduate
Soren Kierkegaard and Fredric Nietzsche
Soren Kierkegaard and Fredric Nietzsche both fought against the rational empiricist streams that flowed from the Enlightenment. The main philosophical thought they opposed was Hegel and his method of giant system making.
Paper Doctorate
Christianity and the Death Penalty
The issue of capital punishment is as old as the Bible itself. God himself was the first to issue an edict of capital punishment. In Genesis 6-8 God decided that all of humanity, except for Noah and his family were to…
Essay Doctorate
Greidanus, Sidney. \"The Modern Preacher Ancient Text.\"
This paper consists of a chapter-by-chapter summary of the theological work The Modern Preacher and the Ancient Text. As Greidanus (1988) in his title implies, the book is an attempt to guide modern preachers to make the Bible interesting and alive to modern congregants without losing the true purpose and intention of the holy text.
Essay Doctorate
Greidanus' Modern Preacher and Ancient Text: key insights and observations
This paper looks at the finer points and general themes present throughout the text, "The Modern Preacher and the Ancient Text" by Sidney Greidanus. Greidanus uses this text effectively to demonstrate the needs of the average student and the areas of systematic focus that should be pursued. In a more meaningful way, Greidanus forges a strong connection between the separate areas of the Bible, demonstrating to the student that connection is everything in order to develop the most nuanced understanding.
Paper Undergraduate
Self-Made Man and the Recipient of Divine
Two of the most famous authors of the colonial era in America were Benjamin Franklin and Jonathan Edwards. However, while Franklin labeled himself a 'self-made man' and suggested that God helped those who helped themselves in his persona of Poor Richard, Jonathan Edwards stressed the innately fallen nature of the human soul and the need for the intervention of divine grace.
Essay Doctorate
Common Sense -- Thomas Paine Thomas Paine,
Thomas Paine, one of the most influential writers of the American Revolution, wrote a pamphlet called Common Sense. In this short work, he incited and inspired American Patriots to declare independence from Great Britain.
Essay Doctorate
Women in Nineteenth Century Europe Were Systematically
This is a four page paper about women and gender in the nineteenth century and modern worlds. The concept of the private sphere defined women's lives and roles in nineteenth-century Europe. Explain what the private and public spheres were, how this idea envisioned women's ideal roles, how that idea was class-based, and the ways that women could escape from the confines of the home.
Research Paper Doctorate
U.S. History the Razor\'s Edge by Sommerset
The Razor's Edge by Sommerset Maugham is superficially the story of Larry Darryl, a war veteran. The apparent protagonist decides to leave his family's comfortable place in Chicago "society," because of the horrors he…
Essay Doctorate
Ephesians 3:14–20: Paul's Prayer and Modern Relevance
Bible study paper, teaching the passage from Ephesians. The outline should indicate the main points and passages of the section and provide an analysis as well as a summary of the teaching of the section. The outline should contain information on the historical/cultural background of the text. Also include some practical and relevant comments about the need for teaching the passage in the Church today. For your overall presentation, provide a main theme that ties the teachings in all the passages together. Bible Passage Ephesians 3:14-20