June 12

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Bible Verse Tower Challenge

By Anna Joy

June 12, 2017


This Bible Verse Tower Challenge is a super fun way to encourage kids to memorize a Bible verse. It could be used as a craft or game. Printable included.

Sometimes the simplest of projects are the most fun!

As soon as I started working on this project, a “Bible verse tower”, my 8-year-old and eleven-year-olds were hanging over my shoulder, begging for their turn to build something.

This Bible Verse Tower Challenge is a super fun way to encourage kids to memorize a Bible verse. It could be used as a craft or game. Printable included.

This project is super quick to pull together, but can be used in a variety of ways. It is a great way to encourage kids to memorize God’s Word.

Bible Verse Tower Materials:

Four disposable drinking straws per child (Younger kids will do better with the thicker “smoothie” straws, but older kids can use the regular drinking straws. The bendable sections of bendableĀ straws add even more fun.)

Download the Bible Verse Straw Tower Template

(One page per child is enough. This works best on cardstock, but it can also be done withĀ regular computer paper.)

Scissors

Markers, crayons, pencils – anything to write with.

Bible Verse Tower Directions:

If age appropriate, haveĀ kids cut the cards out of the printable, cutting along the thick black lines. Do not cut the dotted lines.

Cut the straws into approximately 1.5 inch pieces. If you are using bendable straws, save that bendable part.

In each straw section, cut into the straw slightly on each side, make your cuts point toward each other. If you have kids do this, make sure they are using rounded scissors so they don’t cut themselves. This part can get a little tricky.

Once all of your straw sections are cut, it’s time to play! Fold the longer rectangles along the dotted line. These pieces will make your foundation corners.

Encourage your kids to decide what kind of a structure they would like to make.

In the example above, you can see that I started building a smaller square tower, then realized that I left out a word.

No problem! I added it back in.

Once your kids have an idea of what kind of tower they will construct, they can pull it back apart and write the words to their verse on the cards. For longer verses, they may need to write a couple of words per card.

Short towers with wide bases are easiest to manage. The tower below has the words in order, wrapping around the 3-d shape.

But, if you have older kids who are up for the challenge, tall towers are a definite possibility!

Encourage your kids to get creative with building these structures.

If you are a teacher, you could also make the pieces for these towers and store them in a ziplock bag. Encourage your studentsĀ to put these together like a 3-d puzzle, getting the words in the right order.

You could even make this competitive by making two different colored sets, hiding the cards around the room, splitting your class into two teams, then racing to see which team can find all of the cards in their color and assemble the verse tower in order the quickest.

If you use this idea, I would love to hear how it goes, or what other suggestions you have for it. Please scroll down to comment.

This Bible Verse Tower Challenge is a super fun way to encourage kids to memorize a Bible verse. It could be used as a craft or game. Printable included.

And, if you love this idea, don’t forget to pin it on pinterest or share it on Facebook. That really helps me out!

Download the Bible Verse Straw Tower Template

May God bless you!

Ā 

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  1. This was so helpful! Great idea and so simple to put together.
    Our second grade Sunday School kids are going to love putting this together and making a tower using their bible memory verse. This a great way to challenge them and a fun way for them to memorize their bible verse.
    Thank you and God Bless,
    Evelyn

  2. Thanks for a great idea! I wanted a different activity for our 4/5th graders at youth this week and I think this will be perfect!

  3. I just want to thank you for sharing. I’m a first-time youth director and I find your page very helpful. Thanks for your insight and given talent. God bless you and your family! šŸ™‚

  4. Excellent idea. I definitely want to do this in the youth ministry at my church. I want to split everyone into teams. To make it competitive is it a better idea for me to write out the scriptures on the cards ahead of time and have them just assemble the towers during the game? Or it is much more of a learning and fun experience if during each round of a game I start out by saying a scripture, they race through their bible to see what it is, write on the cards themselves, and see who assembles their towers first? Our youth programs are an hour.

  5. Excel idea. Is there any other way to make it competitive. Iā€™m expecting to have quite a few people playing. Teams

  6. This is a fantastic idea. I think the boys in my class will especially enjoy this. I don’t have time to prepare this tonight, but I am going to remember this in upcoming weeks.

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