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Sermon
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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.

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Paper Undergraduate
Gibran Khalil Gibran: life and literary contributions
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Paper Undergraduate
Jesus: Man, Myth, or Irrelevant
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Essay Doctorate
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Paper Undergraduate
Innocence and Consequences of Abuse
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Research Paper Doctorate
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"Treat your women well and be kind to them for they are your partners and committed helpers." (from the last sermon of Prophet Mohammed) (Women in Islam)
Research Paper Undergraduate
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Paper Undergraduate
Matthew 16: 24-28 Big Picture
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Seven astounding signs are there in the Gospel of John. The first one is the process of evolving water into sweet wine. Second is the instance of curing the son of royal. Third is the instance of curing of an invalid…
Paper Masters
Frederick Douglass: life and legacy
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself appeared in May 1845. William Lloyd Garrisonwrote the preface; Wendell Phillipswrote an introductory letter. Douglass's stark rendering of his torturous slave experiences, however, was the smash. By 1848, eleven thousand copies had been published in the United States; French and German translations had appeared; and in England, it had already experienced nine editions. Ecstatic praise for Douglass's eloquent and touching narrative was widespread. "The book, as a whole, judged as a mere work of art, would widen the fame of Bunyan or Defoe," wrote the Lynn Pioneer reviewer. This reviewer added: "It is the most thrilling work which the American press has ever issued -- and the most important. If it does not open the eyes of this people, they must be petrified into eternal sleep." A British reviewer marveled at Douglass, "a fugitive slave, as but yesterday, escaped from a bondage that doomed him to ignorance and degradation, [who] now stands up and rebukes oppression with a dignity and a fervor scarcely less glowing than that which Paul addressed to Agrippa."
Paper Doctorate
Protestant Devotion to the Virgin
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