New
New
Year 11
Eduqas

Christianity and the aims of punishment

I can explain the different aims of punishment and how religious and non-religious beliefs influence views about which aims matter most.

New
New
Year 11
Eduqas

Christianity and the aims of punishment

I can explain the different aims of punishment and how religious and non-religious beliefs influence views about which aims matter most.

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Lesson details

Key learning points

  1. Punishment can focus on the offender or on others, such as society and victims.
  2. Retribution and reformation focus on the offender, through deserved consequences or personal change.
  3. Protection, deterrence and justice focus on preventing harm, discouraging crime and ensuring fairness.
  4. Non-religious views often prioritise reducing harm, protecting society and respecting dignity.
  5. Christian views emphasise justice, mercy and the possibility of forgiveness and reformation.

Keywords

  • Deterrence - the threat of punishment as a way to put a person off committing crime

  • Justice - ensuring fairness by responding to crimes in a way that holds the offender properly accountable

  • Protection - legal measure aimed at preserving others’ rights and freedoms by removing or restricting those who pose a risk

  • Reformation - helping the criminal understand why their behaviour was wrong, with the goal of changing their mindset and actions

  • Retribution - getting the criminal back for their crimes by giving a punishment as payback or revenge for the wrongdoing

Common misconception

All punishments try to achieve the same thing.

Different punishments have different aims: some focus on changing the offender (like reformation), while others aim to protect society, discourage crime or deliver justice.


To help you plan your year 11 religious education lesson on: Christianity and the aims of punishment, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...

Use real-life examples of punishments (e.g. prison, fines, rehabilitation programmes) to help students clearly see how each one links to a different aim, and encourage discussion on whether the same punishment can serve more than one purpose.
Teacher tip

Equipment

Content guidance

  • Depiction or discussion of sensitive content

Supervision

Adult supervision recommended

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).

Lesson video

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Prior knowledge starter quiz

Download quiz pdf

6 Questions

Q1.
Which Christian teaching best opposes hate crime?

eye for an eye
Correct answer: love your neighbour as yourself
forgive and forget

Q2.
What can increase the seriousness of a crime?

committing it in daylight
being under 18
Correct answer: motivation based on prejudice

Q3.
means dishonestly taking property with intent to keep it.

Correct Answer: Theft, theft, stealing

Q4.
What is one cause of crime identified by Christian groups?

ambition
Correct answer: poverty
boredom

Q5.
The Methodist Church sees crime as a result of relationships and social injustice.

Correct Answer: broken

Q6.
What is a Christian view on forgiveness?

Offenders should never be forgiven.
Forgiveness means forgetting the crime.
Correct answer: Offenders can be forgiven and helped to change.

Assessment exit quiz

Download quiz pdf

6 Questions

Q1.
What is deterrence intended to do?

Make crime more appealing.
Prevent others from reporting crime.
Correct answer: Put people off committing crime.

Q2.
What does protection focus on?

avoiding punishment
Correct answer: keeping society safe
helping victims become offenders

Q3.
All punishments try to achieve the same thing.

Correct answer: False – different punishments have different aims.
True – all punishments aim to hurt the criminal.
False – punishment is always about personal opinion.

Q4.
Reformation helps the criminal understand why their behaviour was .

Correct Answer: wrong

Q5.
Retribution is about punishment as payback or for wrongdoing.

Correct Answer: revenge

Q6.
Christians believe that involves holding offenders accountable.

Correct Answer: justice