Top Repeated Topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC

 

Christian Religious Studies is one of the most widely taken WAEC subjects in Nigeria, and it is also one of the most consistently misunderstood in terms of how to prepare for it. Students assume that because CRS involves faith and scripture, the examination is unpredictable. It is not. The top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC reveals a clear, repeating pattern — the same biblical themes, the same theological concepts, and the same application questions appear year after year.

This article presents the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC with detailed explanations of what WAEC specifically tests under each topic, how to approach theory answers for maximum marks, and what preparation habits separate average from excellent candidates. Read carefully — every section here connects directly to examination marks.

 

Why CRS Topics Repeat in WAEC

The top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC exist because WAEC builds its CRS examination from the national senior secondary school Religious Studies curriculum — a framework designed around the foundational narratives, ethical principles, and theological doctrines of Christian scripture. The life of Christ, the work of the Holy Spirit, the prophetic tradition, the covenant relationship, and Christian social ethics are not optional topics. They represent the permanent pillars of Christian scripture and its application to human life.

Analysing past WAEC CRS papers confirms this pattern clearly. Essay questions on the life and teachings of Jesus appear in virtually every Paper 2. The Holy Spirit, the Early Church, and the call of the prophets are similarly consistent. Questions on social ethics — poverty, corruption, justice, family — connect scripture to contemporary Nigerian realities in ways that WAEC deliberately and repeatedly tests. Understanding this pattern is the most strategic preparation insight a CRS student can have.

 

WAEC CRS Examination — Paper Structure

CRS has two compulsory papers. Understanding how they differ shapes your preparation focus:

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Paper Content Focus Duration Marks
Paper 1 Objective Test — 50 Multiple Choice Questions 50 Minutes 50 Marks
Paper 2 Theory — Essay Questions (Choose 5 from 10) 2 Hours 100 Marks

 

Paper 1 tests factual recall, biblical knowledge, and concept recognition through 50 objective questions. Paper 2 requires structured essay answers — you choose five questions from ten, and your answers must demonstrate understanding of scripture, its context, and its application to human situations. WAEC CRS Paper 2 is one of the most essay-intensive papers in the examination portfolio — clear structure and biblical grounding in every answer are what earn high marks.

 

All Top Repeated Topics — The Master Reference Table

Here is the complete breakdown of the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC, with the specific sub-topics WAEC tests under each area and their examination frequency:

 

S/N Topic Key Sub-Topics Tested Frequency
1 The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ Birth, ministry, miracles, parables, Sermon on the Mount Every Year
2 The Death and Resurrection of Jesus Passion narrative, crucifixion, resurrection appearances, ascension Every Year
3 The Work of the Holy Spirit Pentecost, gifts, fruit, baptism of the Spirit, guidance Every Year
4 The Early Church — Acts of the Apostles Jerusalem church, Paul’s journeys, persecutions, spread of gospel Every Year
5 The Call and Mission of the Prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, Hosea, Ezekiel — calls and messages Every Year
6 Creation and Human Dignity Genesis account, image of God, fall, stewardship, sanctity of life Every Year
7 The Covenant Relationship Noah, Abraham, Moses, David — covenant features and implications Every Year
8 Faith and Works — Christian Living Justification by faith, grace, good works, fruit of the Spirit Every Year
9 Social Ethics and Responsibilities Justice, love of neighbour, poverty, corruption, civic duty Very High
10 The Kingdom of God Parables of the Kingdom, present and future dimensions, entrance Very High
11 Prayer and Worship The Lord’s Prayer, types of prayer, corporate worship, fasting Very High
12 Christian Family Life Marriage, roles, parenting, divorce, sex ethics, domestic violence Very High
13 The Church and Its Mission Nature, marks, sacraments, ministry, evangelism, unity Very High
14 Paul’s Letters and Theology Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians — key themes Very High
15 The Ten Commandments and Mosaic Law Decalogue text, fulfilment in Christ, moral vs ceremonial law High
16 Religious Persecution and Suffering Martyrdom, Stephen, James, Paul, purpose of suffering, endurance High
17 Christian Response to Poverty and Wealth Rich young ruler, Zacchaeus, stewardship, generosity, justice High
18 Death, Resurrection, and Last Things Christian view of death, eternal life, judgement, second coming High
19 Patriarchs — Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph Faith journeys, promises, tests, God’s faithfulness, typology High
20 Inter-Religious Relations and Tolerance CAN, Christian-Muslim relations, religious dialogue, peace Moderate

 

Topics rated “Every Year” are your absolute preparation priority. They appear without exception across both papers. “Very High” topics appear in most years. “High” topics appear regularly. Anchor your study plan to the “Every Year” group before expanding to other areas.

 

Topics 1 to 4 — The Life of Christ, the Spirit, and the Early Church

These four topics form the New Testament core of the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC and generate the most consistently high-mark essay questions across both papers in every examination year.

The Life and Teachings of Jesus Christ

Jesus is the central figure of CRS, and WAEC tests every major dimension of his life and ministry. The birth narratives (both Matthew and Luke accounts), the baptism and temptation, the calling of the disciples, the Sermon on the Mount (Beatitudes, Lord’s Prayer, salt and light, true righteousness), and the parables are all regularly tested. For parables, WAEC asks for the narrative, the lesson, and the contemporary application — always give all three. Miracles — healing, nature miracles, raising the dead — are tested both by their details and by what they reveal about Jesus’ identity and mission. Know the feeding of the five thousand, healing of Jairus’ daughter, walking on water, and the raising of Lazarus in detail.

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The Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ

The Passion narrative generates more WAEC Paper 2 questions than almost any other topic. WAEC tests the entry into Jerusalem (Palm Sunday), the Last Supper and its significance (institution of the Eucharist, the new covenant), the betrayal by Judas, the trials before Pilate and Herod, the crucifixion details (the seven last words, the physical and spiritual significance), and the burial. Resurrection appearances — to Mary Magdalene, the disciples on the road to Emmaus, the appearance in the upper room, the restoration of Peter — must be known individually. The ascension and its theological significance (Christ’s authority, the promise of return, the sending of the Spirit) completes this topic.

 

The Work of the Holy Spirit

The Holy Spirit is one of the most extensively tested doctrinal topics in WAEC CRS. The Day of Pentecost (Acts 2) — the sound, the wind, the tongues of fire, Peter’s sermon, the 3,000 converts — is tested with precision. WAEC also tests the gifts of the Spirit (I Corinthians 12 — wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, miracles, prophecy, tongues, interpretation), the fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23 — love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control), the Spirit as guide and counsellor (John 14-16), and the baptism of the Spirit. Contemporary applications — how the Spirit operates in the life of a believer and in the church — are standard essay question endings.

 

The Early Church — Acts of the Apostles

Acts is the bridge between the Gospels and the Epistles, and WAEC mines it extensively. The Jerusalem church (communal life, the breaking of bread, care for the poor), the persecution and scattering (Stephen’s martyrdom, Saul’s role), the conversion of Paul (Acts 9), Peter’s vision and the conversion of Cornelius (Acts 10 — significance for Gentile inclusion), and Paul’s three missionary journeys are all heavily tested. For Paul’s journeys, know the regions visited, the churches established, the significant miracles, and the persecutions faced. The Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) — resolving the circumcision controversy — is a standard Paper 2 topic.

 

Topics 5 to 8 — Prophets, Creation, Covenant, and Christian Living

The next four topics in the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC cover the Old Testament prophetic tradition, the creation narrative, the covenant theology that runs through both Testaments, and the central principles of Christian living.

The Call and Mission of the Prophets

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Prophets are one of the most reliably tested groups of biblical figures in WAEC CRS. WAEC covers the call narratives and key messages of major and minor prophets. Isaiah: the call vision (Isaiah 6), the Servant Songs, the promise of a future king — study both his call and his Messianic prophecies. Jeremiah: the call (Jeremiah 1), the potter and clay, the new covenant promise (Jeremiah 31). Amos: justice and righteousness as the basis of worship, the denunciation of social injustice, the vision of the plumb line. Hosea: marriage as a metaphor for God’s relationship with Israel, the theme of unfaithfulness and forgiveness. Ezekiel: the vision of dry bones, the promise of a new heart and spirit. For each prophet, know: the historical context, the call narrative, the central message, and its relevance today.

 

Creation and Human Dignity

The creation accounts generate both theological and ethical questions in WAEC CRS. WAEC tests the two Genesis accounts (Genesis 1 — six days of creation, humans as the crown of creation; Genesis 2 — the garden, Adam and Eve, the nature of human companionship), the doctrine of the imago Dei (humans created in the image of God — what this means for human dignity and responsibility), the fall (Genesis 3 — the serpent, disobedience, the consequences), and the concept of stewardship (humans as caretakers of creation). Applications — the sanctity of human life, abortion, euthanasia, environmental responsibility — connect this topic directly to contemporary ethical questions that WAEC regularly tests.

 

The Covenant Relationship

Covenant is the theological backbone of the entire Bible and WAEC tests it systematically. The covenant with Noah (Genesis 9 — the rainbow, the promise of no more flood, the sign), the covenant with Abraham (Genesis 12, 15, 17 — promise of land, descendants, blessing; the sign of circumcision), the Mosaic covenant (Exodus 19-20 — the Ten Commandments, the conditions, the people’s response), and the Davidic covenant (2 Samuel 7 — an everlasting dynasty, the promise of a Son). The New Covenant (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Luke 22 at the Last Supper) fulfils and surpasses the old covenants. WAEC essay questions ask for the specific features of each covenant, its significance, and its connection to Christ.

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Faith and Works — Christian Living

The relationship between faith and works is a central Pauline doctrine that WAEC tests through both theory and application questions. Justification by faith alone (Romans 3-5 — no one is made right with God through law-keeping; faith in Christ is the basis of salvation) must be clearly understood and distinguished from cheap grace. James 2 provides the counterbalance — faith without works is dead; genuine faith produces visible action. The fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) lists the character qualities that mark genuine Christian living. WAEC asks students to apply these principles to contemporary situations — how a Christian should respond to corruption, how faith is demonstrated in daily behaviour, what the marks of genuine discipleship look like.

 

Topics 9 to 14 — Ethics, Kingdom, Prayer, Family, and Paul

This group from the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC covers the Very High frequency topics — areas that appear in most WAEC CRS papers and generate the most consistently applied essay questions connecting scripture to contemporary life.

Social Ethics and Responsibilities

Social ethics is one of the most applied sections of WAEC CRS and questions consistently ask candidates to connect biblical teaching to contemporary Nigerian society. Topics include: justice (Amos 5:24, Micah 6:8 — what God requires), love of neighbour (the parable of the Good Samaritan — who qualifies as a neighbour), attitudes to poverty (James 2:14-17 — practical care for the poor), corruption (Ezekiel 22 — the abuse of power), civic responsibility (Romans 13 — submission to governing authorities; the Christian’s duty as a citizen), and care for the vulnerable (widows, orphans, foreigners in Old Testament law). For any social ethics question, WAEC expects: the biblical basis, the principle extracted, and its practical application in society.

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The Kingdom of God

The Kingdom of God is the central theme of Jesus’ teaching and WAEC tests it through the parables and through the theological dimensions of the Kingdom. Parables of the Kingdom — the Sower, the Wheat and Tares, the Mustard Seed, the Leaven, the Pearl of Great Price, the Net, the Prodigal Son, the Lost Sheep — must each be known with their narrative and specific Kingdom meaning. The Kingdom has a present dimension (already inaugurated through Jesus’ ministry) and a future dimension (not yet fully realised — awaiting the second coming). Entrance into the Kingdom requires repentance, faith, and new birth (John 3:3-5). WAEC questions ask for parables, their meanings, and what they teach about God’s character and the conditions for Kingdom membership.

 

Prayer and Worship

Prayer and worship generate both objective and essay questions in WAEC CRS. The Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-13) is tested for its text, its structure (address, adoration, petition, forgiveness, protection, doxology), and its teaching about the nature of God and the priorities of a disciple’s life. WAEC also tests types of prayer (adoration, confession, thanksgiving, supplication — ACTS), corporate worship (the gathering, singing, preaching, sacraments), fasting (Matthew 6:16-18 — the right motivation for fasting), and the Psalms as models of prayer and worship. The distinction between genuine and hypocritical worship (Matthew 6 — not praying for public display) is a standard essay angle.

 

Christian Family Life

Family life questions connect biblical teaching to the domestic realities students see around them — and WAEC consistently uses this topic to test both knowledge and application. WAEC covers biblical foundations of marriage (Genesis 2:24, Matthew 19:3-9 — God’s design for permanent, monogamous marriage), the roles of husbands and wives (Ephesians 5:22-33 — mutual submission, sacrificial love), Christian parenting (Ephesians 6:1-4 — the command to children, the responsibility of fathers), the Christian view of divorce (Matthew 19 — hardness of heart, the exception clause), sexual ethics (the body as a temple, 1 Corinthians 6:18-20), and Christian responses to domestic violence. WAEC applies all of these to contemporary family challenges in Nigeria.

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The Church and Its Mission

The church as both an institution and a community generates consistent Paper 2 questions. WAEC tests the nature of the church (Ephesians 4 — the body of Christ, diverse gifts serving one purpose), the four marks of the church (one, holy, catholic, apostolic — their meaning and contemporary challenge), the sacraments (Baptism and the Lord’s Supper — their meaning, administration, and significance), ministry in the church (the five-fold ministry of Ephesians 4:11-12 — apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor, teacher), and the church’s mission (the Great Commission of Matthew 28:18-20 — making disciples of all nations). The challenges facing the Nigerian church — false doctrine, prosperity gospel, disunity, worldliness — appear in application questions.

 

Paul’s Letters and Theology

Paul’s letters are foundational to Christian theology and WAEC tests them systematically. Romans: justification by faith (chapters 3-5), the problem of sin (chapter 7), life in the Spirit (chapter 8), the olive tree metaphor (chapters 9-11), practical Christian living (chapters 12-13). 1 Corinthians: divisions in the church (chapter 1), gifts of the Spirit (chapter 12), love (chapter 13 — the ‘love chapter’), resurrection (chapter 15). Galatians: freedom from the law, justification by faith, the fruit of the Spirit. Ephesians: unity in the body of Christ, the armour of God (6:10-18). For each letter, WAEC tests both the specific content and the contemporary relevance.

 

Topics 15 to 20 — Law, Suffering, Wealth, and Patriarchs

The final group in the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC covers the High and Moderate frequency topics that appear consistently enough to reward focused preparation and often generate the most compelling essay questions for well-prepared students.

The Ten Commandments and Mosaic Law

The Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:1-17, Deuteronomy 5:6-21) are tested both as individual commandments with their meaning and as a collective moral framework. WAEC tests the text and meaning of each commandment, the two-table structure (duties to God on the first table, duties to neighbour on the second), Jesus’ fulfilment and deepening of the Law (Matthew 5 — ‘You have heard it said… but I say to you’), and Paul’s teaching on the relationship between law and grace (the law reveals sin but cannot save; Christ fulfils the law’s demands). Contemporary applications — how the commandments apply to business ethics, human rights, and civic life — are standard essay closings.

 

Religious Persecution and Suffering

Persecution and suffering are addressed throughout the New Testament and WAEC tests both the narratives and the theological responses. Stephen’s stoning (Acts 6-7) — his speech, the witnesses, the presence of Saul — and James’s execution (Acts 12) are the most tested persecution narratives. Paul’s suffering catalogue (2 Corinthians 11:23-28) demonstrates suffering as evidence of authentic apostleship. The theology of suffering — Romans 8:18 (present suffering versus future glory), James 1:2-4 (trials producing perseverance), 1 Peter 4:12-16 (suffering as a share in Christ’s sufferings) — is regularly tested. WAEC asks: what does the New Testament teach about the purpose of suffering and how should a Christian respond to persecution?

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Christian Response to Poverty and Wealth

Wealth and poverty generate some of the most practically applicable questions in WAEC CRS. The encounter with the rich young ruler (Mark 10:17-22) illustrates the danger of wealth as an obstacle to Kingdom entrance. Zacchaeus (Luke 19:1-10) demonstrates the transforming effect of encountering Jesus on attitudes to money. The parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31) warns against neglecting the poor. The early church’s communal sharing (Acts 2:44-45) is a model of voluntary redistribution. Paul’s teaching on contentment (Philippians 4:11-13) and the love of money as the root of all evil (1 Timothy 6:6-10) complete the biblical picture. WAEC asks how these passages apply to Christian conduct in a materialistic society.

 

Death, Resurrection, and the Last Things

Eschatology — the doctrine of last things — is tested through both Old Testament hope and New Testament revelation. WAEC tests the Christian understanding of death (not the end but a transition), the resurrection of the dead (1 Corinthians 15 — the nature of the resurrection body, Christ as the firstfruits), the second coming of Christ (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 — the parousia, the trumpet call, the gathering of the elect), the final judgement (Matthew 25:31-46 — the sheep and the goats, the basis of judgement), and eternal life (John 3:16, John 14:1-3 — the many rooms in the Father’s house). The Christian hope of resurrection shapes how believers live in the present.

 

The Patriarchs — Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph

The patriarchal narratives in Genesis are foundational Old Testament content. WAEC tests: Abraham — the call (Genesis 12:1-3), the covenant, the test of faith (the offering of Isaac in Genesis 22), and his response of faith as the model for all believers. Isaac — the promised son, the blessing of Jacob. Jacob — the birthright, the dream at Bethel, the wrestling at Peniel, the twelve sons. Joseph — the coat of many colours, the betrayal by brothers, slavery in Egypt, temptation by Potiphar’s wife, interpretation of dreams, reconciliation with brothers. Each patriarch’s story connects to a theological theme: Abraham (faith), Isaac (promise), Jacob (grace despite failure), Joseph (providence). WAEC links these to the New Testament through typological reading.

 

Inter-Religious Relations and Tolerance

Inter-religious relations is the most contemporary topic in the WAEC CRS syllabus. WAEC tests the nature and structure of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), its role in protecting Christian interests and promoting inter-faith dialogue, the relationship between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria — areas of cooperation (nation-building, disaster response, advocacy against corruption) and areas of tension (religious violence, land for worship, school curricula). The biblical basis for religious tolerance (Romans 12:18 — live at peace with all; Matthew 5:9 — blessed are the peacemakers) and the distinction between tolerance (accepting others’ right to believe differently) and syncretism (merging incompatible beliefs) are conceptual distinctions WAEC regularly tests.

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How to Prepare Using These Topics

The top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC becomes most powerful when it structures your preparation, not just informs it. Here is how to prepare for maximum marks:

Each topic in the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC has a recognisable WAEC question pattern — learning that pattern through past papers means examination questions feel familiar and answerable, not new and unpredictable.

  • Prioritise the eight “Every Year” topics first — the life of Christ, resurrection, Holy Spirit, Early Church, prophets, creation, covenant, and Christian living account for the bulk of marks in every paper. Study each to the depth where you can write a complete, scripturally grounded essay answer without notes.
  • For every topic, build a three-part answer framework: biblical narrative (what happened), biblical teaching (what it means), and contemporary application (how it applies today). WAEC markers specifically award marks at all three levels, and answers that stop at narrative consistently lose application marks.
  • Memorise key Bible passages with their references. WAEC rewards exact or near-exact quotations in essay answers — knowing that John 3:16, Romans 3:23, and Galatians 5:22-23 can be quoted verbatim adds precision to your answers that vague paraphrase does not.
  • Read the question carefully in Paper 2 before choosing your five. Select questions on topics where you can provide the most specific scriptural evidence and the most developed applications. A well-answered question on a slightly harder topic earns more marks than a thin answer on an easy one.
  • Practise writing timed CRS essays — one per day in the final two weeks before the examination. Focus specifically on structuring your introduction (defining the topic with a biblical grounding), developing three to four main points with scriptural support, and closing with contemporary application.
  • Solve at least five years of past WAEC CRS papers. Track which topics generate the most Paper 2 choices and which sub-topics appear repeatedly in Paper 1 — both patterns are consistent and predictable.

 

CRS rewards students who treat the Bible as a living document, not a history textbook. When you connect each topic to its contemporary application — what this means for a Christian student in Nigeria today — your answers become richer, more compelling, and more mark-worthy than those that simply recount biblical events without reflection.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

1. How many essay questions must I answer in WAEC CRS Paper 2?

WAEC CRS Paper 2 presents ten essay questions and requires you to answer five. Always read all ten before selecting. Choose topics where you can provide the most specific biblical evidence and fully developed three-part answers. Avoid choosing based on question length alone — the shortest questions are not always the easiest to answer well.

 

2. Which topics are the easiest to score high marks in?

Among the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC, the life and teachings of Jesus, the work of the Holy Spirit, and prayer and worship are consistently considered the most accessible for well-prepared students. These topics appear every year, have clearly structured biblical content, and generate essay questions with predictable three-part answer structures. Students who study them with specific scriptural references find them highly reliable sources of marks.

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3. Do I need to quote Bible references in my answers?

Yes, strongly. WAEC CRS essay markers specifically look for biblical grounding in every answer. Quoting a passage with its book, chapter, and verse reference (e.g., Romans 3:23 or John 3:16) demonstrates that your answer is scripturally anchored, not opinion-based. You do not need to quote entire passages — a key phrase with the correct reference earns marks. Aim to include at least two or three specific references in every essay answer.

 

4. How should I approach social ethics questions?

Social ethics questions are among the most mark-generous in the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC, and the three-part framework — biblical principle, extracted teaching, and Nigerian application — is the most effective structure. Start with the relevant passage (e.g., Amos 5:24 for justice, Luke 10:25-37 for love of neighbour), explain the theological principle it establishes, then apply it concretely to a contemporary issue in Nigerian society. Markers award marks at each level, so all three parts are essential.

 

5. Are the patriarchs in Genesis important for WAEC CRS?

Yes. The patriarchal narratives — particularly Abraham and Joseph — appear in Paper 1 and Paper 2 with consistent frequency. Abraham’s faith journey (the call, the covenant, the test of Isaac) is tested both for its narrative detail and its theological meaning (faith as the basis of relationship with God, confirmed in Romans 4 and Hebrews 11). Joseph’s story is tested for its demonstration of providence, forgiveness, and God’s ability to bring good from human evil.

 

6. How is the Holy Spirit topic structured for easy recall?

Study the Holy Spirit in four sections: the promise (John 14-16), the coming (Acts 2 — Pentecost), the gifts (1 Corinthians 12), and the fruit (Galatians 5:22-23). For each section, know the key passage, the content, and the application. This four-part structure covers every angle WAEC tests on the Holy Spirit and provides a reliable framework for both objective and essay answers.

 

7. Can I use Nigerian examples in CRS essay answers?

Yes, and it is encouraged. WAEC CRS application questions specifically invite candidates to relate biblical teaching to contemporary Nigerian realities. References to corruption in public life (and the prophet Amos’s denunciations as a parallel), to inter-religious tensions (and the biblical call to peacemaking), or to family breakdown (and Paul’s teaching on marriage) demonstrate the kind of contextual application that earns the highest marks in Paper 2.

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Conclusion

The top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC covers the full sweep of Christian scripture — from the Genesis narratives of creation and covenant to the New Testament accounts of Christ’s ministry, death, and resurrection, from the prophetic tradition that shaped Israel’s faith to the apostolic letters that defined the church’s theology. Every topic on this list appears because WAEC uses it to measure whether a student understands Christianity not just as a set of stories but as a living framework of faith and ethics.

Work through the top repeated topics in Christian Religious Studies WAEC with both scriptural depth and contemporary engagement. Know your Bible passages with their references. Build three-part answers for every topic. Connect every theological principle to its practical application in Nigerian life. Practise essay writing under time pressure. And approach the WAEC CRS examination as a student who does not just know the content but understands why it matters — that depth of engagement is what the highest scores consistently reflect.

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