King James Essays
The Symbolism of Nature, Biblical Lessons, and Tests of Faith in Silence College
The Bible
The Symbolism of Nature, Biblical Lessons, and Tests of Faith in Silence
Shusaku Endo’s novel Silence has confounded and conflicted critics ever since it came out, due to the challenging combination of simple writing, rich symbolism, and...
God's Guidance and the Nature of Kingship in the Book of 1 Samuel and 2 Samuel College
The Bible
When the Bible first introduces the establishment of a kingship in 1 Samuel, God vocalizes his dissent since he is the only ruler that his people need to live prosperously. Even so, the Israelites continue to push for a monarch who can lead the...
Defending John's Reliability 11th Grade
The Bible
The Gospel of John, of all four of the gospels, stands alone in some regards. “Of the four New Testament Gospels, the one that least resembles the other three is the Gospel of John. While some of those most skeptical Gospel scholars dismiss all...
Women and Weaponization College
The Bible
The agency women possess in The Odyssey and The Book of Genesis is harbored in their traditional domestic skills. These domestic skills, while underestimated by men in regards to the Greeks and Israelites, often play an essential role in the...
The Goals of the Divine
The Bible
In both Virgil's The Aeneid and books Genesis and Exodus of the Old Testament, dreams, visions, signs, wonders and divinations serve as powerful testaments to the universal knowledge and might of the pagan Roman gods and the Jewish god. Revealing...
The Language of the Bible
The Bible
"It is done! I am the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end."
Revelation 21:6
From the opening words of the Bible (Revised Standard Version) to its closing 'Amen,' the power of language is highlighted as a central aspect...
The Scope of Wisdom: An Examination of Proverbs 20 and Ecclesiastes 1
The Bible
Ecclesiastes and Proverbs both strive to examine wisdom and faith but approach these subjects on varying levels of existence. The individual person is approached differently in the two books, which enter into a dynamic discourse on the pursuit of...
To Obey or Disobey: The Role of Obedience in the Iliad and Genesis 1-25
The Bible
Even though they were written in the same period of time, the Iliad (written c. 700 BC) and Genesis (compiled between 900 and 400 BC) exhibit many differences in their concepts of obedience. While the Iliad often condones men who disobey, Genesis...
Noah and The Bible
The Bible
The Bible builds its literary foundations upon the themes of Knowledge and Sin, two topoi that are reflected again and again in various parables, allegories, and tales found within this sacred text. Genesis 9:20-27 exemplifies the synthesis of...
Genesis and the Bacchae
The Bible
The characters of Agave and Eve, while subordinate to their male counterparts, Pentheus and Adam, play extremely important roles within The Bacchae and Genesis, respectively. Their characters are portrayals of typical women who, because of...
Words, Wind and Import: Speech in the Book of Job
The Bible
An emphasis on the relationship between speech and sin is present from the inception of the test of Job's virtue. Satan challenges God that, if misfortune befell Job, he would "curse [him] to [his] face," making Job's sin not a psychological or...
Sexual Relations in Genesis: The Rape of Dinah and the story of Tamar and Judah
The Bible
While Genesis, the first book of the Bible, seems to follow a distinct (male-dominated) pattern of history in the story it relates, tracing first Adam and Eve and their sons and then Abraham, his son Isaac, Isaac's son Jacob, and Jacob's son...
There's Something About Mary (Sidney)
The Bible
Before the year 1611, many different translations of the bible existed, but none were very consistent. At this time, at the command of King James the First, forty-seven scholars from various theological and educational backgrounds, separated into...
Man's Fundamental Reverence to the Supreme Being
The Bible
The God of the Old Testament is no less omnipotent today. By definition, the theoretical notion of an all-consuming being points to human limitation and protects the God from being touched by constantly varying human perception. The ultimate,...
The Book of Ecclesiastes and the Human Experience
The Bible
As a philosophical treatise in which the author considers the meaning of man's existence on earth, the Book of Ecclesiastes is an exceptional section of the Tanakh that differs from the traditional didactic narratives surrounding it. The Preacher...
Joseph's Unique Place in Genesis
The Bible
The central, overarching story in Genesis is the account of the fathers of Israel, which contains the individual stories of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and finally Joseph. Although each account is compiled together, there is a fundamental shift in the...
Abstraction in John
The Bible
In the first 18 lines of John, the story of Jesus is introduced with a jarringly brief and emphatic summary of history from the beginning of time to the birth of Christ. This passage formalizes the concept, suggested more subtly in Genesis, that...
Abraham and the Laius Complex
The Bible
With the development of psychoanalysis as a form of literary criticism, there have been many controversial new interpretations of religious texts, including the Bible. One such interpretation is that the Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity,...
The Book of Luke: How Does One Reach Heaven?
The Bible
The book of Luke in the New Testament offers a promise of salvation. John the Baptist proclaims, from the book of Isaiah, that "all flesh shall see the salvation of God" (Luke 3.6). However, earlier in Luke, an angel says, "Glory to God in the...
The Gospel According to Mark and Night: Would St. Mark Call Night a 'Religious Book'?
The Bible
Wiesel's Novella, Night, can be labeled a 'religious book' when looked at in light of the unquestionably religious text, the "Gospel According to Mark" from the "New Testament" of Christianity's Holy Bible. This proves to be the case if one looks...
Appropriation, Politics and Theology in the Gospel of Mark.
The Bible
Appropriation, Politics and Theology in the Gospel of Mark
You search the scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life;
and it is they who testify on my behalf
John 5.39
While it is impossible to ignore the theological weight of the...
Joseph and His Coat of Many Colors
The Bible
Although Joseph is known for his coat of many colors, the true plurality of Joseph arises not from the appearance of his clothing, but from the multiplicity of roles that he assumes over the course of the biblical narrative. Joseph is both favored...
Book of Exodus: Message, Themes, Characters, and New Testament Context
The Bible
Part 1: The Book of Exodus and its Message
In his theory of forms, the philosopher Plato proposes that the objects and situations encountered in the mundane world are often indicative of a higher and fuller reality. While Plato did not have the Old...
Eating Crow: Analyzing Biblical Imagery in the Life and Songs of Ted Hughes's Crow Poems
The Bible
Ted Hughes's book, Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow, is a collection of 67 disturbingly dark poems that explore the evil aspects of life, and human tendency towards violence. The book, dedicated to Hughes's dead second wife Assia Wevill...