Which religious traditions do you cover?
Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox), Islam (Sunni, Shia, Sufi), Judaism, Buddhism (Theravada, Mahayana, Vajrayana), Hinduism (Vedanta, Yoga, Bhakti), Sikhism, Jainism, plus new religious movements and comparative studies.
Will primary religious texts be engaged?
Yes. Bible (Hebrew, Greek, Latin, English), Qur’an + hadith, Talmud, Buddhist Pali canon, Vedas + Upanishads + Bhagavad Gita. Direct engagement, original-language where relevant.
Which referencing styles do you use?
SBL Handbook (Biblical studies), Chicago Notes-Bibliography (theology generally), Turabian (graduate theology), APA / Harvard for religious studies / sociology of religion.
Can you do biblical exegesis?
Yes. Historical-critical method, source / form / redaction criticism, narrative criticism, feminist hermeneutics, liberation hermeneutics, post-colonial readings.
Who writes the essays?
PhD theologians and religious scholars, tradition-matched. Catholic by Catholic theologian, Islamic by Islamic scholar, etc.
Do you handle comparative religion?
Yes. Comparative themes handled with respect, accuracy, scholarly rigour. No conflation, no caricature.
Do you use AI?
No. Theology examiners detect AI essays (vague theology, hallucinated scripture references, wrong attributions). Every essay human-written.
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