Home






SCHEME OF WORK
CRE
Form 3 2025
TERM III
School


To enable/disable signing area for H.O.D & Principal, click here to update signature status on your profile.




To enable/disable showing Teachers name and TSC Number, click here to update teacher details status on your profile.












Did you know that you can edit this scheme? Just click on the part you want to edit!!! (Shift+Enter creates a new line)


WK LSN TOPIC SUB-TOPIC OBJECTIVES T/L ACTIVITIES T/L AIDS REFERENCE REMARKS
2 1
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
Definition of terms: Prophet and Prophecy
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define the terms prophet and prophecy. Explain the Hebrew and Greek origins of the word prophet. Identify other terms used to describe prophets. Distinguish between prophets and prophetesses in the Old Testament.
Q/A: Review prophets studied in Form 1 (Moses, Elijah, Nathan, Samuel). Discussion: Meaning of prophetes and nabi. Brainstorming: Other names for prophets (messenger, watchman, seer). Bible study: Examples of prophetesses (Miriam, Deborah, Hulda).
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 28-29
2 2
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
Understanding prophecy in biblical context
Categories of prophets - True prophets
Early prophets and cultic prophets
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain prophecy as God's revealed truth. Describe the role of predictions in prophecy. Analyze how prophets dealt with present, past, and future events. Evaluate prophecy as recognized institution in Israel.
Discussion: Prophecy vs. fortune telling. Analysis: How prophets interpreted current events. Q/A: Relationship between prophecy and Holy Spirit. Bible reading: Examples of predictive prophecy. Assignment: Research prophecy in New Testament.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 28-29
2 3
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
False prophets and their characteristics
The importance of prophets in Israel
How prophets received God's call and messages
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify characteristics of false prophets. Explain how false prophets operated. Describe the challenge they posed to true prophets. Analyze examples of conflicts between true and false prophets.
Discussion: How to distinguish false from true prophets. Case study: Elijah vs. prophets of Baal. Analysis: Jeremiah vs. Hananiah conflict. Q/A: Why false prophets were dangerous to Israel. Assignment: Research modern false prophets.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 31-32
2 4
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
Prophets' roles and functions in society
Prophets' messages of judgment and hope
Characteristics of true prophets
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Outline the various roles prophets played in Israel. Explain prophets as conscience of kings. Describe prophets' work in condemning social evils. Analyze prophets as preachers of practical monotheism.
Case studies: Nathan confronting David, Elijah challenging Ahab. Discussion: How prophets fought idolatry. Analysis: Prophets condemning social injustice. Q/A: Prophets as authoritative preachers of righteousness.
The Bible.
The Bible. Chart of prophetic characteristics. Examples of prophetic courage.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 31-32
3 1
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
More characteristics: Authority, symbolic actions, and prayer life
The writing of prophetic messages - Content and types
How prophetic messages were recorded
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe prophets' authority and courage in speaking. Explain use of symbolic actions in prophetic ministry. Analyze prophets' prayer life and withdrawal for revelation. Evaluate how prophets emulated God's attributes.
Case studies: Symbolic actions (Hosea's marriage, Isaiah walking naked, Jeremiah's clay pot). Discussion: Source of prophetic authority. Analysis: Moses' 40 days on mountain. Q/A: How prophets lived holy lives.
The Bible
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 33-34
3 2
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
Preservation and compilation of prophetic messages
Relationship between Old Testament and New Testament
Messianic prophecies and their fulfillment
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe how disciples preserved prophetic traditions. Explain the compilation process over time. Analyze how messages were organized by themes. Evaluate the use of prophetic messages by later generations.
Discussion: Isaiah's instruction to disciples (Isaiah 8:16). Analysis: How traditions about Isaiah were incorporated in 2 Kings. Q/A: Thematic organization of oracles. Example: Jeremiah 26:17-18 quoting Micah.
The Bible.
The Bible. Chart of messianic prophecies and fulfillment. Timeline of Jesus' ministry.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 35-36
3 3
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
John the Baptist and the transition period
Jesus as the suffering servant and humble king
Comparison between traditional African and Old Testament prophets - Similarities
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain John the Baptist as forerunner of Messiah. Describe prophecies about John's ministry (Malachi, Isaiah). Analyze John's role in preparing for Jesus. Evaluate John as the last Old Testament prophet.
Bible study: Isaiah 40:3-5, Malachi 3:1, Luke 3:1-20. Discussion: John's baptism of repentance. Analysis: John's recognition of Jesus as Messiah. Q/A: Jesus' commendation of John as greatest prophet.
The Bible.
The Bible. Information about African traditional prophets. Comparison chart of similarities.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 36-37
3 4
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
PROPHET AMOS
More similarities and differences
Relevance of Old Testament prophets to Christians
Background to Prophet Amos - Historical and personal context
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe more similarities (healing roles, resistance to oppression). Explain key differences in authority sources. Analyze differences in scope and hereditary nature. Evaluate the unique features of each prophetic tradition.
Continued comparison: Both performed healing roles. Analysis: Differences in source of authority (God vs. ancestors).
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 38-39
4

CAT EXAMINATIONS

5 1
PROPHET AMOS
Political and economic background
Social and religious background
The call of Amos and confrontation with Amaziah
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe political stability during Jeroboam II's reign. Explain economic prosperity and wealth concentration. Analyze the rising threat of Assyrian empire. Evaluate the gap between rich and poor in Israel.
Bible reading: 2 Kings 14:23-29. Discussion: Jeroboam II as warrior king expanding borders. Analysis: Assyrian threat under Tiglath-Pileser III (745-727 BCE). Case study: Wealth concentrated in cities vs. rural poverty. Q/A: Legal exploitation of peasant farmers.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 42-45
5 2
PROPHET AMOS
Lessons from Amos' call and the five visions introduction
Visions of locusts and fire - God's mercy through intercession
Visions of plumb line and summer fruits - Inevitable judgment
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify lessons Christians learn from Amos' calling. Explain how God uses ordinary people for extraordinary work. Define vision as medium of divine revelation. Describe the progression of Amos' five visions.
Discussion: Amos as ordinary shepherd called to ministry. Q/A: How students can serve God regardless of status. Explanation: Difference between vision and dream. Overview: Five visions showing progression from mercy to judgment.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 48-50
5 3
PROPHET AMOS
Vision of altar destruction and modern significance of visions
Social justice teachings - Slavery, exploitation, and sexual immorality
Breaking laws on pledges, bribery, and corruption
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe the fifth vision of altar destruction at Bethel. Explain complete judgment with no escape possible. Analyze how God still speaks through visions today. Evaluate the role of visions in modern church guidance.
Bible reading: Amos 9:1-4. Description: Destruction of altar and all worshippers. Discussion: No hiding place from God's judgment. Analysis: Examples of modern prophetic visions in churches. Q/A: How visions help in church decisions and leadership.
The Bible.
The Bible
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 51-53
5 4
PROPHET AMOS
Greed, luxury, and cheating in business
Relevance of social justice teachings for Christians today
Hypocritical religion - External observance without inner piety
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe excessive luxury of rich at expense of poor. Explain false security of wealthy leaders. Analyze cheating practices by merchants and traders. Evaluate violations of fair business laws.
Bible reading: Amos 4:1-3, 6:1-8, 8:4-6. Discussion: Rich women compared to "cows of Bashan". Analysis: Leaders sitting "at ease" feeling "secure". Description: False scales, overcharging, poor quality goods. Q/A: Merchants eager to end religious festivals for business.
The Bible.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 57-59
6 1
PROPHET AMOS
God's demand for justice and relevance for Christians
Judgment on surrounding nations
God's judgment on Israel and Judah
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain Amos' call for justice flowing like waters. Describe what true religion means according to Amos. Analyze relationship between worship and social behavior. Evaluate how Christians can avoid insincere worship.
Bible reading: Amos 5:24 - "Let justice roll down like waters". Discussion: True worship involving whole life commitment. Analysis: Connection between ritual and ethical behavior. Q/A: Ensuring worship reflects genuine faith. Case study: Examples of authentic Christianity.
The Bible.
The Bible
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 63-65
6 2
PROPHET AMOS
Forms of punishment and call for repentance
Relevance of judgment teachings for Christians
Israel's election - Concept, misunderstanding, and God's universal activity
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe various punishments God would send to Israel. Explain invasion, pestilence, earthquake, eclipse, famine of God's word, exile. Analyze Amos' call for individual repentance. Evaluate possibility of escape through righteousness.
Bible reading: Amos 5:14-17, 6:9-11, 8:9-13, 9:2-4. Discussion: Progression from military to natural to spiritual disasters. Analysis: Individual responsibility vs. national guilt. Q/A: "Seek good and not evil, that you may live". Timeline: Prophecy to 721 BCE fulfillment.
The Bible.
The Bible. Covenant relationship info. Chart of God's universal activity. Election concepts comparison.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 68-71
6 3
PROPHET AMOS
Relevance of election for Christians
The Day of the Lord - Expectations vs. reality
Relevance of Day of the Lord for Christians
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain Christians as New Israel, chosen people. Describe Christian election and responsibilities. Analyze dangers of presuming on God's favor. Evaluate moral obligations of Christian calling.
Bible reading: 1 Peter 2:9. Discussion: Christians as "chosen race, royal priesthood". Analysis: Election brings responsibility, not just privilege. Q/A: How Christians should understand their calling. Application: Living up to election responsibilities.
The Bible.
The Bible. .
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 74-75
6 4
PROPHET AMOS
The remnant concept and restoration promises
Relevance of remnant teaching for Christians
Synthesis of Amos' major teachings
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Define remnant as faithful survivors of judgment. Explain Amos' teaching about sieving Israel. Describe restoration of Davidic kingdom. Analyze material prosperity in restored land.
Bible reading: Amos 9:8-15. Discussion: Remnant as grain vs. chaff in sieve. Analysis: Restoration under new Davidic king. Description: Great harvests, rebuilt cities, return from exile. Example: Elijah and 7,000 faithful to God.
The Bible.
The Bible.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 78-80
7 1
PROPHET AMOS
PROPHET JEREMIAH
PROPHET JEREMIAH
Contemporary applications and Christian discipleship
Jeremiah's call and its relevance to Christians
Jeremiah's suffering and Christian discipleship
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Apply Amos' teachings to modern Christian living. Identify ways to promote social justice today. Explain authentic worship vs. religious hypocrisy. Evaluate Christian responsibility in society.
Discussion: Practical applications of Amos' message. Action planning: Promoting justice in community. Analysis: Avoiding religious hypocrisy. Q/A: Church's prophetic role in society. Commitment: Personal response to prophetic calling.
The Bible.
The Bible. Calling experiences. Divine preparation examples. Service testimonies.
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 82-84
7 2
PROPHET JEREMIAH
Hypocrisy in worship and call for repentance
New Covenant and Christian life
Judgment, punishment, and divine justice
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain Jeremiah's condemnation of hypocritical worship. Describe the gap between ritual and righteousness. Analyze his call for genuine repentance. Evaluate relevance for modern Christian worship.
Discussion: External religion vs. internal commitment. Analysis: Why God rejected their sacrifices and prayers. Q/A: What constitutes genuine repentance.
The Bible. Worship authenticity guides. Repentance examples. Self-examination materials.
The Bible.
The Bible
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 103-104
7 3
PROPHET JEREMIAH
JEREMIAH'S TEACHINGS ON JUDGMENT AND PUNISHMENT
Hope, restoration, and the righteous king
The Temple and Jerusalem in prophecy
Judgment and Punishment - God's universal judgment
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain Jeremiah's messages of hope and restoration. Describe prophecies about the righteous king (Messiah). Analyze the restoration of Jerusalem and Temple. Evaluate fulfillment in Christ and future hope.
Bible reading: Jeremiah 23:5-6, 30-33. Discussion: "Branch of righteousness" from David's line. Analysis: Restoration of both physical and spiritual Israel. Q/A: How Jesus fulfills righteous king prophecy.
The Bible.
The Bible
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 105-106
7 4
JEREMIAH'S TEACHINGS ON JUDGMENT AND PUNISHMENT
Symbolic acts related to Judgment and Punishment - Personal symbols
Symbolic acts related to Judgment and Punishment - Object lessons
Symbolic acts related to Judgment and Punishment - Visions and yoke
The fall of Jerusalem and exile - Historical fulfillment
Relevance of Jeremiah's teachings on judgment for Christians today
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

Define symbolic acts and their purpose in prophecy
Describe the wearing of the waistcloth and its meaning
Explain the parable of wine-filled jars
Interpret Jeremiah's celibacy as a sign
Analyze how personal actions conveyed divine messages
Bible reading: Jeremiah 13:1-11, 13:12-14, 16:1-9
Demonstration: Cloth around waist representing close relationship
Illustration: Empty jars filled with wine then broken
Discussion: Cost of prophetic ministry - no marriage, no mourning
Q/A: Why God used personal life as teaching tool
The Bible
KLB BK III Pg 87-88
8-9

END TERM EXAMINATIONS


Your Name Comes Here


Download

Feedback