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| WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Reporting and Revision |
|||||||
| 2 | 1-2 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Introduction to unity of believers and the people of God
The people of God - Old Testament background The people of God in the New Testament The body of Christ - Biblical foundation |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define the concept of unity of believers. Explain the meaning of different names for early Christians. Analyze factors that contributed to unity among early Christians. Compare unity among believers with national unity in Kenya. Explain the New Testament concept of people of God. Describe characteristics of God's people according to 1 Peter 2:9-10. Analyze how believers become God's people through faith. Evaluate the universal nature of God's people. |
Q/A: Review different names for early Christians from Acts. Discussion: Meaning of unity in various contexts. Comparison: Factors for unity in Kenya vs. early church. Brainstorming: Challenges facing unity in modern church. Bible reading: Galatians 3:28.
Bible reading: 1 Peter 2:9-10. Discussion: Difference between Old and New Testament people of God. Analysis: Meaning of "chosen race, royal priesthood, holy nation". Q/A: How faith rather than ancestry determines membership. Reflection: Living as God's special people. |
The Bible.
The Bible. Charts The Bible. Comparison chart The Bible. Diagram of human body. Chart of church roles and functions. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 15-16
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 16-17 |
|
| 2 | 3 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Unity in the body of Christ
The vine and the branches |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Outline elements of unity according to Ephesians 4:1-12. Explain the seven unities centered on Trinity. Describe virtues needed for maintaining unity. Analyze how spiritual gifts promote unity. |
Bible reading: Ephesians 4:1-12. Discussion: The seven "ones" in Ephesians 4. Analysis: How humility, gentleness, patience promote unity. Q/A: Role of apostles, prophets, evangelists in unity. Practical application: Building unity in local church.
|
The Bible. Chart of seven elements of unity.
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 17-18
|
|
| 2 | 4 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
The church as assembly of God
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define the meaning of "church" (ekklesia). Explain the church as assembly of God's people. Describe different meanings of "church" today. Analyze Paul's marriage analogy for church unity. |
Discussion: Different meanings of word "church". Bible reading: Ephesians 5:21-32. Analysis: Church as assembly vs. building vs. denomination. Q/A: How marriage illustrates church unity. Comparison: Husband-wife relationship with Christ-church relationship.
|
The Bible. Visual aids showing different meanings of church.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 19-20
|
|
| 2 | 5 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
The church as the bride
Causes of disunity in early church - Leadership disputes |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain the concept of church as bride of Christ. Describe the marriage imagery in Old and New Testaments. Analyze the wedding preparations and expectations. Evaluate the eternal nature of the union. |
Bible reading: 2 Corinthians 11:2, Revelation 21:1-2. Discussion: Old Testament background of Israel as bride. Analysis: New Jerusalem as bride prepared for husband. Q/A: What makes a bride beautiful for wedding. Reflection: Preparing for eternal union with Christ.
|
The Bible.
Charts The Bible |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 19-20
|
|
| 3 | 1-2 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Causes of disunity - Meat offered to idols and spiritual gifts
Causes of disunity - Lord's Supper and resurrection Other causes of disunity in early church The Council of Jerusalem |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain the problem of eating meat offered to idols. Describe the conflict between strong and weak Christians. Analyze the misuse of spiritual gifts in Corinth. Evaluate Paul's solutions to these problems. Identify additional problems causing disunity. Explain disputes over head covering during worship. Describe issues of sexual immorality in the church. Analyze problems with marriage, divorce, and civil court cases. |
Bible reading: 1 Corinthians 8, 12-14. Discussion: Why eating idol meat was controversial. Analysis: How spiritual gifts created division. Q/A: Paul's advice on considering weaker Christians. Practical application: Modern equivalent situations.
Bible reading: 1 Corinthians 5, 6:1-11, 7, 11:2-16. Discussion: Cultural issues affecting early church. Analysis: How moral problems divided the church. Q/A: Paul's solutions to various disputes. Comparison: Early church problems vs. modern church issues. |
The Bible.
Charts |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 21-22
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 23-24 |
|
| 3 | 3 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Solutions offered by Paul to disunity
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Outline Paul's comprehensive solutions to church divisions. Explain the principle of love as supreme solution. Describe the importance of considering others. Analyze the role of proper worship in maintaining unity. |
Review of 1 Corinthians solutions. Discussion: How love solves all problems. Analysis: Paul's practical advice for different situations. Q/A: Why love is the "most excellent way". Synthesis: Bringing together all of Paul's solutions.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 21-25
|
|
| 3 | 4 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Causes of disunity in Kenyan churches today
More causes of disunity in Kenya |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify modern causes of church disunity in Kenya. Explain formation of splinter groups. Describe misunderstanding of spiritual gifts today. Analyze discrimination within churches. |
Brainstorming: Current problems dividing Kenyan churches. Discussion: Why new denominations keep emerging. Case studies: Examples of church splits in Kenya. Analysis: How material issues cause divisions. Field assignment: Interview about church unity challenges.
|
The Bible.
Charts |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 23-24
|
|
| 3 | 5 |
THE UNITY OF BELIEVERS
|
Solutions to disunity in Kenyan churches
Promoting unity among believers today |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Suggest solutions to problems causing disunity in Kenya. Explain the role of love in solving church problems. Describe how churches can respect each other's differences. Analyze the importance of focusing on essential Christian beliefs. |
Brainstorming: Solutions to identified problems. Discussion: How to maintain unity amid diversity. Analysis: Role of church leadership in promoting unity. Q/A: What are essential vs. non-essential Christian beliefs. Action planning: Steps for promoting unity in local churches.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 25-26
|
|
| 4 | 1-2 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
Definition of terms: Prophet and Prophecy
Understanding prophecy in biblical context Categories of prophets - True prophets |
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. Identify different categories of Old Testament prophets. Explain the classification of Major prophets. Describe Minor prophets and their characteristics. Distinguish between Canonical and Early prophets. |
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).
Bible exploration: Books of Major prophets (Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel). Discussion: Why some are called "major" and others "minor". Analysis: Length and content of prophetic books. Q/A: Difference between Canonical and Early prophets. |
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 28-29
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 29-30 |
|
| 4 | 3 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
Early prophets and cultic prophets
False prophets and their characteristics |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe Early prophets and their communities. Explain the role of cultic prophets in worship. Analyze prophetic guilds or schools. Evaluate the work of prophets in religious centers. |
Discussion: Elijah and Elisha as leaders of prophetic communities. Analysis: Role of prophets at Bethel and Jerusalem. Q/A: How cultic prophets worked with priests. Case study: Prophetic communities and their influence.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 30-31
|
|
| 4 | 4 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
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:
Explain the central role of prophets in Israel's life. Describe prophets as mediators between God and people. Analyze how prophets received and communicated God's messages. Evaluate prophets' role in socio-economic, political, and religious spheres. |
Discussion: Primary role of prophets as God's messengers. Analysis: Different ways prophets received revelations. Q/A: Prophets' use of "Thus says the Lord". Case study: How prophets influenced national decisions.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 30-31
|
|
| 4 | 5 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
Prophets' roles and functions in society
Prophets' messages of judgment and hope |
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.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 31-32
|
|
| 5 | 1-2 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
Characteristics of true prophets
More characteristics: Authority, symbolic actions, and prayer life The writing of prophetic messages - Content and types |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify key characteristics of genuine prophets. Explain how prophets heard and obeyed God's voice. Describe prophets' belief in monotheism and covenant relationship. Analyze prophets' understanding of God's holiness and justice. 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. |
Discussion: Different ways God revealed Himself to prophets. Analysis: Prophets' absolute commitment to monotheism. Q/A: How prophets stood for covenant relationship. Case study: Prophets' courage in facing opposition.
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. Chart of prophetic characteristics. Examples of prophetic courage.
The Bible The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 32-33
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 33-34 |
|
| 5 | 3 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
How prophetic messages were recorded
Preservation and compilation of prophetic messages |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain why prophetic messages needed to be written down. Describe the role of scribes in recording prophecies. Analyze the example of Jeremiah and Baruch. Evaluate how oral traditions were preserved by disciples. |
Case study: Jeremiah 36:1-4 on dictating to Baruch. Discussion: Why written records were necessary. Analysis: King Jehoiakim burning the scroll. Q/A: Role of prophetic disciples in preservation.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 34-35
|
|
| 5 | 4 |
THE WRITING 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:
Explain how Old Testament points to salvation history. Describe God's promise to Abraham about blessing nations. Analyze Jesus' attitude toward the Law of Moses. Evaluate how Jesus fulfilled rather than destroyed the Law. |
Bible study: Genesis 12:3 and Matthew 5:17. Discussion: Jesus as descendant of Abraham and David. Analysis: Jesus' summary of Law in love commandments. Q/A: How Jesus set higher standards than Mosaic Law.
|
The Bible.
The Bible. Chart of messianic prophecies and fulfillment. Timeline of Jesus' ministry. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 35-36
|
|
| 5 | 5 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
John the Baptist and the transition period
|
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.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 36-37
|
|
| 6 | 1-2 |
THE WRITING OF PROPHETIC MESSAGES
|
Jesus as the suffering servant and humble king
Comparison between traditional African and Old Testament prophets - Similarities More similarities and differences Relevance of Old Testament prophets to Christians |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe Jesus as fulfillment of Isaiah's suffering servant. Explain how Jesus differed from Jewish messianic expectations. Analyze Jesus' entry into Jerusalem on donkey. Evaluate Zechariah's prophecy about humble king. 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. |
Bible study: Isaiah 53, Zechariah 9:9-10. Discussion: Why suffering Messiah was unexpected. Analysis: Contrast between political and spiritual kingship. Q/A: How Jesus brought peace rather than war.
Continued comparison: Both performed healing roles. Analysis: Differences in source of authority (God vs. ancestors). |
The Bible.
The Bible. Information about African traditional prophets. Comparison chart of similarities. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 37-38
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 38-39 |
|
| 6 | 3 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Background to Prophet Amos - Historical and personal context
Political and economic background |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify the historical background of Prophet Amos. Describe Amos' personal life, occupation, and ministry period. Explain the significance of a Judean prophet sent to Israel. Analyze the reigns of Jeroboam II and Uzziah. |
Q/A: Review prophets from previous units. Map work: Locate Tekoa, Israel's boundaries. Discussion: Amos as shepherd and sycamore tree tender. Timeline: Contemporary kings (786-743 BCE Israel, 783-742 BCE Judah). Analysis: Why God sent Judean prophet to Northern Kingdom.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 41-44
|
|
| 6 | 4 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Social and religious background
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify social problems and moral decline during Amos' time. Explain corruption in law courts and declining morality. Describe religious hypocrisy in Northern Kingdom. Analyze worship centers and idolatrous practices. |
Discussion: How wealth led to social corruption and bribery. Analysis: Sexual immorality and breakdown of covenant brotherhood. Map work: Locate Bethel, Gilgal, Samaria as worship centers. Q/A: Combining Yahweh worship with idols (Sakkuth, Kaiwan).
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 45-46
|
|
| 6 | 5 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
The call of Amos and confrontation with Amaziah
Lessons from Amos' call and the five visions introduction |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe the compelling nature of Amos' prophetic call around 758 BCE. Explain Amos' ministry at Bethel shrine. Analyze the confrontation with Amaziah the priest. Evaluate Amos' response about his calling and background. |
Bible reading: Amos 1:1, 3:8, 7:10-17. Discussion: Lion's roar metaphor for irresistible divine call. Analysis: Amaziah's accusation and order to leave Israel. Role play: Confrontation between Amos and Amaziah. Q/A: Amos' defense - not professional prophet but called by God.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 46-48
|
|
| 7 | 1-2 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Visions of locusts and fire - God's mercy through intercession
Visions of plumb line and summer fruits - Inevitable judgment Vision of altar destruction and modern significance of visions Social justice teachings - Slavery, exploitation, and sexual immorality |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe the first vision of locust plague threatening Israel's crops. Explain the second vision of supernatural fire. Analyze Amos' intercession for Israel in both visions. Evaluate God's merciful response to prophetic prayer. 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 7:1-6. Discussion: Locusts consuming crops after king's taxation. Analysis: Fire threatening to consume subterranean waters and earth. Q/A: Amos pleading "How can Jacob stand? He is so small!" Compare: Moses' intercession (Exodus 32:11-14).
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. The Bible |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 49-50
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 51-53 |
|
| 7 | 3 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Breaking laws on pledges, bribery, and corruption
Greed, luxury, and cheating in business |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain God's laws on garments taken as pledges. Describe corruption in law courts and bribery practices. Analyze how rich violated lending laws for profit. Evaluate the breakdown of justice system in Israel. |
Bible reading: Exodus 22:26-27, Deuteronomy 24:10-13, Amos 5:10-15. Discussion: Why poor person's garment shouldn't be kept overnight. Analysis: How elders took bribes and perverted justice. Q/A: Examples of oppression in city gates and courts. Modern application: Current corruption in Kenya.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 56-57
|
|
| 7 | 4 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Relevance of social justice teachings for Christians today
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify modern social evils Amos would condemn in Kenya. Explain how Christians should respond to social injustice. Analyze the church's role in promoting justice. Evaluate practical ways to combat corruption and exploitation. |
Brainstorming: Social evils in Kenya (corruption, exploitation, sexual immorality). Discussion: Christian responses to injustice. Analysis: Church as conscience of society. Action planning: Combating injustice through advocacy, education, example. Q/A: Successful justice movements.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 59-61
|
|
| 7 | 5 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Hypocritical religion - External observance without inner piety
God's demand for justice and relevance for Christians |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe worship practices at Bethel and Gilgal. Explain the problem of ritual without righteousness. Analyze how worshippers combined ceremony with injustice. Evaluate God's rejection of hypocritical worship. |
Bible reading: Amos 4:4-5, 5:21-27. Discussion: Difference between true and false worship. Analysis: Why God hated feasts and rejected sacrifices. Q/A: Worship of idols alongside Yahweh. Comparison: Proper vs. hypocritical worship practices.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 61-63
|
|
| 8 | 1-2 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Judgment on surrounding nations
God's judgment on Israel and Judah Forms of punishment and call for repentance Relevance of judgment teachings for Christians |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain God's judgment on Syria, Philistia, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab. Describe specific crimes committed by each nation. Analyze the "three transgressions and four" formula. Evaluate God's universal moral demands on all peoples. 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 1:3-2:3. Discussion: War crimes, slave trading, treaty breaking. Map work: Locate nations mentioned in judgments. Analysis: God's moral standards apply to all nations. Q/A: Universal nature of divine justice.
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. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 65-67
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 68-71 |
|
| 8 | 3 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Israel's election - Concept, misunderstanding, and God's universal activity
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define biblical concept of election and covenant relationship. Explain Israel's misunderstanding of divine favor. Describe God's work among all nations. Analyze God's freedom to choose and reject peoples. |
Bible reading: Amos 2:9-11, 3:1-2, 9:7. Discussion: Election for service, not privilege. Analysis: "Are you not like Ethiopians to me?" Q/A: God bringing other peoples to their lands. Comparison: True vs. false understanding of election.
|
The Bible. Covenant relationship info. Chart of God's universal activity. Election concepts comparison.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 72-74
|
|
| 8 | 4 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Relevance of election for Christians
The Day of the Lord - Expectations vs. reality |
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.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 74-75
|
|
| 8 | 5 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Relevance of Day of the Lord for Christians
The remnant concept and restoration promises |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain Christian understanding as Second Coming of Christ. Describe Jesus' return as Lord and Judge. Analyze Christian preparation for Parousia. Evaluate importance of righteous living in expectation. |
Discussion: Day of Lord as Second Coming. Bible reading: Mark 13:32-36 on unknown timing. Analysis: How Christians should prepare for return. Q/A: Judgment day for everyone's actions. Reflection: Personal readiness for Christ's coming.
|
The Bible. .
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 77-78
|
|
| 9 | 1 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Relevance of remnant teaching for Christians
Synthesis of Amos' major teachings |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain Christians as faithful remnant through grace. Describe hope for righteous while sinners face judgment. Analyze God's preservation of faithful witnesses. Evaluate Christian role in world redemption. |
Bible reading: Romans 11:5. Discussion: Christians as remnant chosen by grace. Analysis: Hope that only unrepentant perish. Q/A: God's faithfulness through faithful people. Application: Christians as witnesses to world.
|
The Bible.
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 80-81
|
|
| 9-10 |
MID TERM EXAMS AND BREAK |
|||||||
| 10 | 3 |
PROPHET AMOS
|
Contemporary applications 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.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 82-84
|
|
| 10 | 4 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Background to Prophet Jeremiah - Political context
Social and economic background |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify the political background during Jeremiah's ministry. Describe the decline of Assyrian power and rise of Babylon. Explain the reigns of Judean kings during Jeremiah's time. Analyze the international political situation affecting Judah. |
Timeline: Jeremiah's ministry (626-587 BCE). Map work: Locate Assyria, Babylon, Egypt in relation to Judah. Discussion: Fall of Nineveh (612 BCE) and shift in power. Q/A: Kings during Jeremiah's ministry - Josiah, Jehoahaz, Jehoiakim, Jehoiachin, Zedekiah.
|
The Bible.
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 68-69
|
|
| 10 | 5 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Religious background and syncretism
Jeremiah's personal life and family background |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify religious practices in Judah during Jeremiah's ministry. Explain the influence of foreign religions and syncretism. Describe idol worship and pagan practices. Analyze the religious reforms and their failures. |
Discussion: How political alliances brought foreign religious practices. Analysis: Worship of Molech, Asherah poles, high places. Q/A: King Josiah's reforms and their temporary nature. Map work: Locate high places and pagan worship sites.
|
The Bible. Information about ancient pagan religions. Pictures of ancient idols. Religious practices comparison chart.
The Bible |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 69-70
|
|
| 11 | 1-2 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Jeremiah's call - The divine encounter
Jeremiah's commission and mission Evils addressed by Jeremiah - Necromancy and false prophecy |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe Jeremiah's call experience in detail. Explain God's choice of Jeremiah before birth. Analyze Jeremiah's initial reluctance and God's response. Evaluate the significance of the almond rod and boiling pot visions. Identify the evil practices that Jeremiah condemned. Explain necromancy and consultation of the dead. Describe the problem of false prophecy in Judah. Analyze Jeremiah's confrontation with false prophets like Hananiah. |
Bible reading: Jeremiah 1:4-19. Discussion: "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you". Analysis: Jeremiah's excuse of being too young. Explanation: Almond rod (watching) and boiling pot (judgment from north) visions. Q/A: God's promise to be with Jeremiah.
Bible reading: Jeremiah 14:14, 27:9, 29:8-9. Discussion: Necromancy as forbidden practice in Israel. Analysis: False prophets promising peace without repentance. Case study: Jeremiah vs. Hananiah (Jeremiah 28). Q/A: How to distinguish true from false prophecy. |
The Bible. Pictures of almond branches.
The Bible. The Bible. I |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 71-74
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 74-76 |
|
| 11 | 3 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Dishonesty, human sacrifice, and idolatry
The Temple Sermon - Content and significance |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe dishonesty and deception in Judah's society. Explain the practice of human sacrifice. Analyze widespread idolatry and its consequences. Evaluate the corruption of covenant relationship with God. |
Discussion: How dishonesty pervaded all levels of society. Analysis: Child sacrifice in Valley of Hinnom (Molech worship). Description: Various forms of idolatry (golden calves, Asherah poles). Q/A: How idolatry broke covenant with Yahweh.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 76-78
|
|
| 11 | 4 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Reactions to Temple Sermon and relevance for Christians
Jeremiah's teachings on judgment and punishment - Divine judgment announced |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe the various reactions to Jeremiah's Temple Sermon. Explain opposition from priests and false prophets. Analyze the people's resistance to change. Evaluate the relevance of Jeremiah's message for modern Christians. |
Discussion: Why religious leaders opposed Jeremiah's message. Analysis: People's preference for comfortable lies over hard truths. Q/A: How modern Christians can avoid false confidence in religious activities. Application: Genuine faith vs. mere religious observance.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 80-82
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| 11 | 5 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Modes of punishment - Military, natural, and spiritual
Symbolic acts related to judgment - Waistcloth and wine jars |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify various modes of punishment God would use. Explain military conquest and siege warfare. Describe natural disasters and plagues. Analyze spiritual punishment and abandonment. |
Discussion: Siege of Jerusalem and its horrors. Analysis: Famine, pestilence, sword as trio of judgments. Description: God withdrawing His presence and protection. Q/A: How different punishments complemented each other.
|
The Bible.
The Bible. Cloth for demonstration. Empty jars for illustration. Symbolic action examples. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 85-87
|
|
| 12 | 1-2 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Symbolic acts - Celibacy, potter and clay, earthen flask
More symbolic acts - Fig baskets and wooden yoke The fall of Jerusalem and exile |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe Jeremiah's commanded celibacy and its meaning. Explain the potter and clay object lesson. Analyze the breaking of the earthen flask. Evaluate how these acts proclaimed judgment. Describe the vision of two baskets of figs. Explain the symbolism of good and bad figs. Analyze Jeremiah wearing the wooden yoke. Evaluate the message of submission to Babylon. |
Bible reading: Jeremiah 16:1-4, 18:1-12, 19:1-15. Discussion: Why Jeremiah was forbidden to marry. Demonstration: Potter working clay to show God's sovereignty. Action: Breaking pottery to symbolize destruction. Q/A: Personal cost of prophetic ministry.
Bible reading: Jeremiah 24:1-10, 27:1-28:17. Discussion: Good figs (exiles) vs. bad figs (those remaining). Demonstration: Wearing yoke to symbolize submission. Analysis: Why submission to Babylon was God's will. Q/A: Controversy over Jeremiah's political message. |
The Bible.
The Bible. The Bible. Historical accounts of siege. Archaeological evidence. Destruction timeline. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 88-90
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 90-91 |
|
| 12 | 3 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Jeremiah's suffering and lamentations - Plots against his life
Jeremiah's isolation, mockery, and torture |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe various plots against Jeremiah's life. Explain opposition from family, friends, and officials. Analyze Jeremiah's emotional responses to persecution. Evaluate the cost of prophetic ministry. |
Bible reading: Jeremiah 11:18-23, 12:6. Discussion: Plot by men of Anathoth (his hometown). Analysis: Even family members turned against him. Q/A: Why people wanted to silence Jeremiah. Character study: Jeremiah's perseverance under persecution.
|
The Bible.
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 95-96
|
|
| 12 | 4 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Jeremiah's arrest, trial, and imprisonment
Relevance of Jeremiah's sufferings for Christians |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe Jeremiah's arrest for alleged treason. Explain his trial before officials and king. Analyze his defense and acquittal. Evaluate his later imprisonment in various locations. |
Bible reading: Jeremiah 26, 37-38. Discussion: Charges of treason for advocating surrender. Analysis: Defense based on divine calling and precedent. Description: Imprisonment in Jonathan's house and muddy cistern. Q/A: How Jeremiah survived long imprisonment.
|
The Bible. Ancient prison conditions. Trial procedures. Survival testimonies.
The Bible. |
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 96-97
|
|
| 12 | 5 |
PROPHET JEREMIAH
|
Symbolic acts related to hope - Vision of figs and ox-yoke
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe symbolic acts that conveyed hope and restoration. Explain the vision of two baskets of figs (good exiles). Analyze wearing ox-yoke as temporary submission. Evaluate messages of eventual restoration. |
Bible reading: Jeremiah 24:1-10, 27:1-22. Discussion: How good figs represented faithful remnant in exile. Analysis: Yoke as temporary burden before freedom. Q/A: Why hope accompanied judgment messages. Comparison: Judgment vs. restoration symbolism.
|
The Bible.
|
KLB Secondary CRE Form 3, Pages 98-99
|
|
| 13 |
END OF TERM EXAMS AND BREAK |
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