Tuesday, July 20, 2010

What are some interesting topics for Religion research paper?

Culturalization of religious values, creation of modern religions, liberalism verses conservatism in any given religion, dissemination of a religion over time and geography...





Personally, I found writting a paper on the cultural acclimation of different immigrant groups and their religions in the USA to be pretty interesting.

What are some interesting topics for Religion research paper?
Why most of the World worships God on the wrong day of the week. God's word never changes. (google constantine especially look at 324AD)
Reply:The religious persecution of early Mormons.
Reply:The two natures of Christ as taught in the Bible.
Reply:Fred Phelps and his family.





AKA the extreme Christian homophobe, who, by picketing at soldier's funerals with signs saying "God hates fags," is doing more help in increasing gay unity and erasing homophobia than he thinks he is.





Check out:





www.godhatesfags.com (Phelp's church website)





and





www.phagsforphelps.com (the gay website that supports Phelps in an ironic, yet justified way)
Reply:not knwong about the class here a couple


1. differnce between Orhtodox Chritiantiy and catholisism.


2. Gnosticsim and Hinduism/ Busisim


3. Jewish and Zororastian beleifes
Reply:1) Where did Jesus give instructions that the Christian faith should be based exclusively on a book?


2) Other than the specific command to John to pen the Revelation, where did Jesus tell His apostles to write anything down and compile it into an authoritative book?


3) Where in the New Testament do the apostles tell future generations that the Christian faith will be based solely on a book?


4) If the meaning of the Bible is so clear—so easily interpreted—and if the Holy Spirit leads every Christian to interpret it for themselves, then why are there so many different Protestant denominations, and millions of individual Protestants, all interpreting the Bible differently?


5) How did the early Church evangelize and overthrow the Roman Empire, survive and prosper almost 350 years, without knowing for sure which books belong in the canon of Scripture?


6) Who in the Church had the authority to determine which books belonged in the New Testament canon and to make this decision binding on all Christians? If nobody has this authority, then can I remove or add books to the canon on my own authority?


7) Why do Protestant scholars recognize the early Church councils at Hippo and Carthage as the first instances in which the New Testament canon was officially ratified, but ignore the fact that those same councils ratified the Old Testament canon used by the Catholic Church today but abandoned by Protestants at the Reformation?


8) If the early Church believed in sola Scriptura, why do the creeds of the early Church always say “we believe in the Holy Catholic Church,” and not “we believe in Holy Scripture”?


9) The time interval between the Resurrection and the establishment of the New Testament canon in AD 382 is roughly the same as the interval between the arrival of the Mayflower in America and the present day. Therefore, since the early Christians had no defined New Testament for almost four hundred years, how did they practice sola Scriptura?


10) If Christianity is a “book religion,” how did it flourish during the first 1500 years of Church history when the vast majority of people were illiterate?


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