"Sermon" Essays and Research Papers

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    Father Flynn's Parables

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    that he recently encounters. As the play opens he expresses main points in the theme using a parable‚ to teach a lesson of doubt‚ and to not fear doubt. This sermon foreshadows the dramatic ending to the conclusion of the play but throughout sets a tone for questioning each character and their opinion. As Father Flynn opens his first sermon with a question that insinuates doubt‚ by asking “What do you do when you’re not sure?” (p. 1939) I believe he is also asking the congregation to open their

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    Capernaum Religion

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    it is something which is an inherited God-given gift. Now‚ ask those same 100 people what a successful Godly sermon is supposed to contain and the answers will likely be even more varied. If you took that same question and asked it to 100 different members of the Lord’s church what answers would you get? You will likely find that many‚ have accepted the fact that if you have a sermon with a catchy introduction and some beautiful illustrations that run all the way through it which

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    Doubt

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    Summary of Doubt‚ A Parable The play opens with a Father Flynn giving a sermon about having doubts‚ or being unsure. Following the sermon‚ Sister Aloysius questions one of the teachers on her staff about the father. She then moves on to talk about a student. From the exchange between the nuns‚ it is clear that Sister Aloysius does not like Father Flynn. Though the teacher‚ Sister James‚ is kind-hearted‚ Sister Aloysius leads her to believe this is weakness. She also asks Sister James to watch Donald

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    Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God The sermon ”Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God” was written by Christian theologian Jonathan Edwards‚ in 1741‚during the Puritan Revival also called Great Awakening.The doctrine was intended to plunge the fear of God into those who were being sinful. The author wants the audience to achieve grace and go to heaven. Jonathan Edwards tried to scare the audience into believing that God could do away with them at any second. He uses comparisons to portray the

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    During the Great Awakening‚ New England colonies –experimented-- a period of spiritual renewal that involved rigorous‚ emotional prayer and vehement sermons. The purpose of this religious revival was to inspire people to attend to Church and to accentuate the corruption of human beings along with the urgency for immediate contrition. It is of our knowledge that Edwards grew up in an atmosphere composed of Puritan piety and teachings‚ therefore he was a liege believer in good and evil. According to

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    Comparing the themes in two poems by Les Murray The poem Broad Bean Sermon and the Burning Truck are two contrasting poems by the poet les Murray. The poem Broad Bean Sermon explores various themes such as; the beauty of nature and positiveness e.g. the positive outlooks on the environment. It is about the person giving a spiritual speech about these beans; however he’s not focusing on the ordinariness of the beans but rather he is concentrating on the uniqueness and different types or personalities

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    Edwards God's Wrath

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    how much control they had over the fate of their own eternal souls. For many the answer was revealed like a emotional lightning bolt from the heavens above‚ striking through the words of impassioned evangelicals and awakening them through scorching sermons. The truth revealed through a picture of hell itself painted with words and the terrifying fate awaiting all

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    Perkins influenced the British pulpit in several ways. He was a prolific writer who desired to fill a gap that existed between ministers and an understanding of their responsibilities. In his Calling of the Ministry he clearly laid out their role and responsibility; he raised the bar for minister. Exhorting them to understand the significance of their call. They were messengers sent by God to proclaim a message of reconciliation. Perkins emphasized‚ however that the minister was only a messenger

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    The “grabber” or the introduction of the speech an important detail to take notice. Jesus begins to deliver the Sermon on the Mount with an example of anaphora. In the beginning‚ Jesus starts speaking of the Beatitudes and this section includes repetition of the word “Blessed.” This is the example of anaphora as is it emphasizes the idea of those who are blessed according to the sermon. One can see this literary device used throughout the first eleven verses of chapter five (Matthew) and of course

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    Dbq Great Awakening

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    Essay Question: What were the causes of the Great Awakening and to what extent did this intense religious revival affect those who experienced ¡°conversion¡± as well as those who did not? During Europe¡¯s period of Enlightment from 1687-1789‚ new scientific theories and ideas were proposed‚ changing the nature of how the world was looked at and questioned the very fundamentals of religion. The Great Awakening of the 1730s-1740s acted as a direct response to the Enlightment in order to revive the

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