Best 20 Bible Study Printables for Kids Homeschool
Tuesday morning Bible study at our house looks nothing like what I imagined when I started homeschooling. Ellie, my eight-year-old, has a strong opinion about which passage we cover – she lobbied hard for Revelation last month, which, no. Noah is six and will draw on literally anything I put in front of him. And then there is Mae, who is three, who shows up, climbs onto the chair, and mostly just chews her pencil. Somehow the verses get in anyway. That is the whole point.
I have gone through a lot of Bible study printables over the past two years. Some were too text-heavy for the younger two. Some had teacher prep that took longer than the actual study. One set had such tiny font that Noah declared it “not for kids” and he was not wrong. What works in our house is something Ellie can read independently, something with enough space that Noah will fill it in instead of just drawing borders around it, and something I can print on five minutes’ notice without reading a manual.
This list is the ones that actually survived our Tuesday chaos. Heads up: some links below are affiliate links, so if you grab something through one it helps keep PsalmKids going at no extra cost to you. I picked these because they are on Creative Fabrica and the image quality holds up when you print at home – no muddy gradients, no pixelated text.
Heads up: some links below are affiliate links. If you grab something through them it helps keep PsalmKids running, at no extra cost to you.
Known by God – Christian Faith Quote Floral Print for Kids

We used this one the week Ellie came home upset because a friend at co-op said something unkind. The floral border is feminine enough that she claimed it immediately, which meant Noah wanted one too, so I printed two. The “Known” concept hit differently in that context – we talked through what it means that God knows each of them specifically, not just generally.
Print tip: this one is portrait orientation and the florals sit close to the edge, so set your printer margins to minimum or you will clip the border. I print at 95% scale to give myself a small safety margin. Works well on white cardstock – the colors stay vivid without needing a photo printer.
Justified by Faith – Floral Quote Printable for Homeschool Bible Study

Justified is a word my eight-year-old asked me to define three separate times before it clicked. This print helped because it pairs the word with a visual anchor – we left it on the kitchen table for a week and it came up again over dinner without any prompting from me. That kind of passive reinforcement is exactly what I want from a Bible study visual.
Print tip: the floral elements on this one use some deeper jewel tones. If your printer is running low on cyan or magenta, the colors will shift noticeably – worth checking your ink before a session where the visual is part of the lesson. I laminate the one we keep out long-term so it survives the counter.
Unstoppable Faith – Bold Christian Quote Print Kids Will Actually Display

My son Noah, who is six, picked “Unstoppable” as his favorite word from our whole printables collection this year. He taped his copy to the wall next to his bed, which is the highest compliment he gives anything. The word choice is concrete enough for kids to grab onto without needing much explanation – we spent about four minutes on it before Ellie started connecting it to Daniel and the lions, which I had not planned but absolutely took.
Print tip: bold typography means this one scales well. I have printed it at 5×7 and at full 8.5×11 and both work. The smaller size fits nicely in the front pocket of a homeschool binder if your kids keep study portfolios.
The Lord Provides – Genesis Bible Verse Print for Homeschool Study

We did a three-week unit on provision in the Old Testament – Abraham, Elijah, the manna. This print anchored the whole series. Having the verse on paper meant the kids could hold something during the discussion, which matters more than I expected. Ellie referenced “the Lord provides” spontaneously two weeks later when we ran out of a pantry staple and had to improvise dinner. Theology landing in daily life: yes.
Print tip: the design has good whitespace below the verse text, which I used as a journaling area for the older two. I gave them a specific prompt each week – “write one time this week you saw God provide something” – and they filled it in before we started. Turns out blank space in a printable is an asset.
God Gives Peace – Christian Faith Design for Kids Bible Memorization

Peace is a concept that hits different with a three-year-old in the room. Mae was having a loud morning when we did this one, and Noah – unprompted – told her “Mae, God gives peace” in a very solemn voice. That happened. It went into the memory bank immediately.
The print has softer colors than some in this series, which reads as calmer on the wall. We have kept it up in the study corner for two months now and it still looks intentional rather than faded. For younger kids who are just learning to read, the larger font on this one makes it accessible – Mae traces the letters with her finger during study time and calls it “doing her work.”
He Is Able – Ephesians 3 Bible Verse Print for Older Kids Study

Ephesians 3:20 – the “exceedingly abundantly above all we can ask or think” verse – is one I want my kids to know by heart before they leave home. This print has become part of how we are working on it. We did a call-and-response version where I read the first half and they finish it, using the print as a reference until they have it without looking.
Print tip: this is one where I printed multiple copies intentionally – one for the study area, one for each kid’s room, and a smaller version I tucked into Ellie’s nature journal. Repetition in different contexts accelerates memorization without it feeling like rote drilling. The typography on this one holds up at smaller print sizes, which is useful.
Light Shines – John 1 Bible Verse Print for Kids Advent or Anytime

We pulled this one out in December but honestly it works any time of year. The John 1:5 verse – light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it – prompted the longest discussion we have had in a Tuesday session. Noah wanted to know if darkness was a person. Ellie thought it might mean bad things that happen. Mae knocked over her juice. Standard Tuesday.
This is the print that made Ellie start her own verse binder. She asked if she could keep it, put it in a plastic sleeve, and that became the spine of a whole collection she now maintains herself. If one print started something lasting, it was this one.
God Remembers – Old Testament Bible Verse Print for Homeschool Wall Art

We studied Noah’s ark – the actual Noah, not my son – and got to the part in Genesis 8 where God remembers Noah. My son Noah’s reaction was immediate: “He remembered me too?” We had a twenty-minute conversation from that single verse. The print now hangs in his room.
Print tip: the design has a quieter color palette than some of the floral series – more muted greens and creams. It layered well onto our wall without competing with the other prints nearby. I have found that not every print needs to be vibrant – the calmer ones are often the ones that stay on the wall longest because they do not feel overwhelming in a kid’s room.
Hope Endures – Bible Verse Wall Print for Kids Homeschool Bible Unit

Hope is an abstract concept. My six-year-old needed a handle for it, so we spent part of one session just listing things we hope for – ranging from the theological (Jesus’ return) to the practical (a snow day). The print held the word while we unpacked it, which is exactly what I need a printable to do.
What I like about this one structurally is that the verse reference is prominent, not buried. Ellie can find the verse in her Bible independently because she can read the reference off the print. That matters for the eight-year-old stage – she wants to look things up herself, and anything that blocks that independence causes friction.
The Lord Heals – Bible Verse Print for Kids Prayer and Study Time

We used this one during a week when two people in our extended family were sick. The conversation that came out of it was one I had not planned and was not ready for – Noah asked if praying for healing always works, and that is a real theological question. We sat with it. The print was on the table the whole time, which grounded us in the text rather than letting the conversation float.
Print tip: I keep a small stack of blank index cards next to our study table for exactly these moments. When a big question comes up, I write it on a card and we look for an answer together over the following weeks. This print generated two index cards.
Salvation Belongs – Psalm-Rooted Bible Verse Print for Kids Bible Study

“Salvation belongs to the Lord” – Psalm 3:8 – is a verse that sounds simple and is actually enormous. We came back to it three separate sessions because each time we pulled on a different thread. First session: what is salvation. Second session: why “belongs” – who else might claim it. Third session: Ellie found two other verses that use the same phrase and brought them to study unprompted.
The print itself has clean composition – verse text large enough to read from across the table, which I appreciate when I want kids to look up from their own sheet and read together out loud. That communal reading moment is hard to engineer and good print layout helps.
It Is Finished – John 19 Bible Verse Print for Easter or Year-Round Study

Three words. My eight-year-old wanted to know why three words get their own verse, which is a genuinely good question and led us into a long conversation about what exactly was finished and why that mattered. We used this one in the spring but it does not have to be Easter-specific – the cross is present in every part of the year if you are teaching it that way.
Print tip: the typographic treatment on this one is bold and spare – very different from the floral series. I put them on the same table once and noticed the kids were drawn to different ones based on their mood. Ellie went for this one. Noah went for a floral. That told me something useful about how they each connect with the text.
Be Merciful – Luke 6 Bible Verse Print for Character Study with Kids

Luke 6:36 came up in our house the week Noah had a conflict with a neighbor kid. I did not plan it that way – it was already on the schedule. But the timing meant the verse landed with immediate relevance, which is the kind of thing that makes you feel like the curriculum is working even when you did not engineer it.
We used the back of the print as a reflection sheet – I asked each child to write or draw one way they could be merciful that week. Ellie wrote a sentence. Noah drew a picture of sharing his Legos. Mae scribbled and told me it said “nice.” All three did something with it, which is the goal.
The Lord Bless You – Numbers 6 Verse Print for Homeschool Morning Routine

The Aaronic blessing is something I want my kids to know by sound, not just sight – we hear it at church most Sundays. Having it in print form at home creates a bridge between Sunday worship and Tuesday study. Ellie started saying parts of it over her siblings unprompted, which is either sweet or slightly bossy depending on the morning.
Print tip: this one works well framed at low height – I put ours at kid eye level on the hallway wall near the front door. We read it on the way out some mornings, not as a formal thing, just because it is there. Ambient scripture is underrated as a homeschool tool.
Keep the Faith – Bible Verse Print for Homeschool Encouragement Wall

Some weeks homeschool is hard and I need the reminder as much as the kids do. This print lives in my study corner partly for them and partly for me. The phrase is simple enough for Mae to repeat – she says “keep faith” and nods very seriously – and substantial enough that Ellie and I have had real conversations about what faithfulness looks like when things are difficult.
The font is bold and the layout gives it a poster-like quality without being loud. It reads more like something you hang because you mean it than something you hang because it fills space. That is a distinction I have started paying attention to.
He Will Uphold – Isaiah 41 Verse Print for Kids Who Need Courage

Isaiah 41:10 is the verse I come back to whenever something feels too big. We introduced it the week Ellie started a new co-op class where she knew no one, and she asked to keep the print in her backpack for the first month. It came home eventually, a little crumpled, and now lives in her binder.
For the memorization stage, this one is good because the verse has a natural rhythm – “do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God.” We clapped the rhythm one Tuesday and Noah had the first half memorized by the end of the session without realizing that was what was happening. The print helped because he could check himself against the text.
A Few Last Thoughts
Sixteen printables into this list and I realize what they all have in common: they are short enough that even Mae stays at the table until we finish. That is not nothing. When you are homeschooling multiple ages at once, a printable that works for a six-year-old and an eight-year-old simultaneously is worth its weight in printer ink.
A few things I have learned the hard way: print on cardstock if you want these to last more than one Tuesday. Regular paper survives Noah’s pencil pressure about sixty percent of the time. If you are doing a verse series – say, working through John over several weeks – print a set at once and keep them in a binder so the kids can flip back. Ellie started doing this on her own after we did the John 1 light shines print, and watching her connect passages without me prompting it was one of those unexpected homeschool wins.
Bible study at home is never going to be perfectly quiet or perfectly organized. Mae will knock something off the table. Noah will ask a question that sends us sideways for ten minutes. Ellie will want to debate. But the verses land, week after week, and a good printable is part of what makes that happen. Pick one that matches where your kids are right now and just start. You do not need the whole set.
More Bible Printables for Kids
- Best 20 Christian Homeschool Printables Bundle for Kids
- Scripture Printable Bundles for Homeschool: 8 Worth the Folder Space
- Bible Verse Printables for Homeschool: 8 We Use All Year
- Scripture Copywork Printables for Our Homeschool Mornings
Frequently Asked Questions
What Bible study printables are included for homeschooling kids?
These typically offer kid-friendly study sheets like verse breakdowns, reflection questions, fill-ins, and note pages that guide children gently through a passage. They give structure to family Bible time without overwhelming young learners. Pairing them with reading the passage together makes the study active rather than passive.
What grade levels are these Bible study printables best for?
The simpler reflection and coloring pages suit early elementary, while the note-taking and question sheets work well for older kids. In a multi-age homeschool you can study the same passage at different depths. Check the preview to match the page to each child's reading and writing level.
How do I print these study pages for daily homeschool use?
Print the PDF on standard paper for daily work, or slip a master page into a sheet protector for reusable practice. Printing a week's worth at once saves a daily trip to the printer. Keep the file saved so you can reprint as you move through different books of the Bible.
