10 creative Wordless Book gospel presentations
The Wordless Book is one of the simplest (and most powerful) tools ever created for sharing the gospel with children.
No batteries. No Wi‑Fi. Not even words. Just a handful of colors that tell the greatest story ever told.
Used by Sunday school teachers, parents, children’s pastors, and missionaries to share the gospel with kids in languages and cultures across the world.
Why? Because it works. Kids see the story unfold. They remember the colors and the Bible truth each one represents.
The beauty of the Wordless Book is its flexibility. Whether you use a simple booklet or any of the creative ideas in the video and instructions below, the message stays the same—and it’s unforgettable.
Share the timeless gospel story in fresh, colorful ways
Find the perfect way to hold the attention of the kids in your children’s ministry, Sunday school, VBS, or outreach events.
First, watch this video for a demonstration of each of the ideas. Then read the explanations below for more information.
Idea #0: The Classic Wordless Book
Sometimes simple is best. Before you try any props, magic tricks, or object lessons, remember—you can share the gospel powerfully with just the Wordless Book itself.
Flip through the pages. Let the colors do the talking:
- Gold/Yellow – God loves you and wants you to live with Him forever in Heaven (John 3:16)
- Dark or Blue – Our sin breaks our friendship with God and separates us from Him (Romans 3:23)
- Red – Jesus died on the cross to take our punishment on Himself. Because of His shed blood (represented by the color red), we can become friends with God again (Romans 5:8)
- White – When we believe in Jesus as our Savior, He washes our sins away and gives us eternal life (John 6:47)
- Green – Green is the color of growth (like living plants) and represents growing in our new life with God and getting to know Him better and better (John 14:21)
- Bonus Color: Orange – I like to add the color orange and joke with the kids, “Orange you glad Jesus loves us? Get it – orange you glad? Like, aren’t you glad?” It’s a real groaner and the kids just roll their eyes, but the adult volunteers think it’s funny.
The beauty of the “classic” wordless book method is in its purity – kids focus completely on the gospel message. No distractions, no gimmicks. And because it’s so visual, even the youngest listeners (or those who don’t read yet) can follow along and remember the truth.
📖 Tip: If you don’t already have a Wordless Book, you can make your own by stapling together colored construction paper or felt squares, or search for "wordless book printable" on Google.
Idea #1: Legos – Building the Gospel, Brick by Brick

Legos aren’t just for playtime—they can become a powerful Wordless Book gospel object lesson for kids. This is one of my favorite ways to visually connect the Good News to something children already love.
For the complete Instructions from letthelittlechildrencome.com, click here.
Changes I make to their presentation:
Swap the black heart for blue.
- I swap blue bricks for the black bricks they show for the heart. Then I use the line, “we all BLUE it” to talk about sin.
- I start with each LEGO shape separated into two halves, and then snap them together as I tell the story. That way kids can’t already guess what each shape is.
If you like this idea, check out our whole article on Bible Object Lessons with LEGO.
For more low-prep, high-impact stuff like object lessons, curriculum news, and theology that kids actually get, join our newsletter: click here or on the graphic.
Idea #2: Jenga Tower Gospel

This one’s a real crowd-pleaser—especially if you like a little drama. And it turns a game that kids are familiar with into a Wordless Book gospel teaching tool.
You’ll need:
- A set of colored Jenga-style blocks, or just color your own as described in the video.
- A paper towel from a dispenser.
Stack the colored blocks on the paper towel and place it on the edge of a table. When you’re ready, grab the paper towel and pull it straight down fast so it slides over the edge of the table.
Optional twist to follow-up your teaching:
- Play Jenga the traditional way.
- Let kids take turns pulling blocks while you tell the gospel story.
- Each time they pull a block, they must explain what the color means before placing it on top.
💡 Pro Tip: This is an amazing outreach event activity—kids can join in instantly, no prior Bible knowledge required, and they’ll remember the truth because they played it.
Idea #3: Gospel Headbands

This method is simple, colorful, and really lends itself to audience participation – get the kids involved in telling the salvation story.
Use colored headbands like these to represent each color of the Wordless Book.
Pro Tip: Invite five kids up front to be your “color team.” Give each one a headband in a different gospel color. As you tell the story, point to the child wearing that color and have them repeat a short key phrase after you:
- Blue – “We all blew it.”
- Red – “Jesus died for me.”
- White – “My sins are forgiven.”
- Green – “I can grow in God and get to know Him.”
- Yellow – “I’ll live with God forever.”
If you’ve got a larger group, let the audience shout the key phrase with each volunteer when it’s their turn. Not only does it keep the energy up, but repetition helps kids remember the truth long after the lesson is over.
Idea #4: Color-Changing Cups

This is one of my favorite visual gospel presentations for kids!
All you need are five plastic cups, some food coloring, and an opaque pitcher. Here’s the setup:
- Add 5 drops of food coloring to the bottom of each clear cup:
- Cup 1: Blue
- Cup 2: Red
- Cup 3: Leave clear, no drops
- Cup 4: Green
- Cup 5: Yellow
- As you pour clear water from the pitcher, each cup "magically" changes color—illustrating each part of the gospel story as you tell it.
Pro tip: Hide the food coloring with something on the table (I used leftover headbands in the video) so that kids wouldn’t see the drops at the bottom.
Idea #5: Eggs-citing Gospel Eggs-perience

Ready for messy fun that leaves a lasting impression? Try the Wordless Book with eggs! You’ll love the eggs-pressions on your kids’ faces!
🛒 What you’ll need:
From the grocery store: 5 dozen eggs, Food coloring, White vinegar, and a Meat tenderizer (These can usually be found at your grocery store, but if not, order one like this from Amazon.)
From the dollar store (or Amazon): Disposable metal baking pans, Funnels, Plastic tablecloth
🥚 Prep instructions:
· Hard-boil 1/3 of the eggs.
o Put the eggs in a pot and add enough water to cover the eggs with about 1 inch to spare.
o Heat on high heat to bring the water to a boil.
o When the water boils, put a lid on the pot and take it off the heat.
o Let the eggs sit in the hot water for about 10 minutes, Then drain and set the eggs aside to cool.
<add image of colored eggs here>
· Dye all the eggs (both boiled and raw)

o When the hard-boiled eggs are cool, separate them equally into four separate containers, one container for each color you’ll be dyeing the eggs.
o Add the non-hard-boiled eggs to the four containers so that you have an equal number in each container.
o Add water, white vinegar, and food coloring to each container using this ratio: 1 cup of hot water to 2 teaspoons white vinegar to 40 drops food coloring. (So, for example, if it takes 5 cups of water to cover the eggs in a container, add 10 teaspoons of white vinegar and 200 drops of food coloring)
· After 10 minutes, drain the water and let the eggs dry.
· When they're cool, put the eggs back in the egg cartons. At this point, even you don't know which ones are raw and which ones are hard-boiled.
Presentation
Put the tablecloth on the table, then put the eggs on the funnels inside the metal baking pans and let students smash the eggs with the hammer.
⚠️ Reminder: Use hand sanitizer or soap afterward, raw eggs present a salmonella risk if you don’t wash hands!
Clean-Up
When you’re done, leave the baking pans on the table cloth, and grab the corners of the table cloth and fold it up with the baking pans inside, and toss the whole thing in the trash. Your clean-up is done in 30 seconds!
Idea #6: Human Volunteers

Turn volunteers into your gospel object lesson!
Choose five volunteers and assign each one a color. Tell each one what you’re doing and ask them to come to class in the blue-est, red-est, green-est or yellow-est costume they can. The sillier and more over-the-top, the better!
Give them a couple weeks to prepare and give them a budget if you can. That way, they can buy silly hats in their color, silly capes, etc.
Then, as you tell the story, use your volunteers as your visual aids.
Keep the energy high. The more animated you and your volunteers are, the more the message will stick with your kids.
Idea #7: Balloon Game Gospel

Put a colorful twist on the classic “Heads or Tails” game by using helium and non-helium balloons.
Make two balloons for each color – one filled with helium, one filled with air.
Talk through the Wordless Book story using one balloon of each color, then transition into a fun version of the “Heads or Tails” game where kids guess which balloon will float.
Not only does the game help you review the Wordless book truths, but it gets kids out of their seats and moving around.
(Not familiar with “Heads or Tails”? Jesse Joyner explains it here.)
Idea #8: Flipbook Gospel

Use a flipbook to teach the gospel one color (and concept) at a time.
The Gospel Buttons Flip Book is a fun, hands-on way to walk through the colors in order—and it keeps kids engaged visually and physically. Great for small groups or one-on-one conversations.
📖 Tip: Color the “splat” on the Sin page blue so you can use the “we all blue it” line.

Idea #9: Gospel Color-Changing Bag (Magic-Style)

Unfortunately, these bags aren’t being produced anymore.
If you’d like to find one, try searching ebay.com for “magic gag bag with zipper for kids.”
Look for one similar to the example shown here:

Idea #10: The Appearing-Colors Wordless Book

This illusion-based gospel tool looks like a blank book—until the colors appear one by one as you flip the pages. Kids are amazed!
Don’t worry—you don’t need to be a magician to pull it off. Seriously. This trick is called The Magic Coloring Book and it’s one of the easiest magic tricks ever invented.
Unfortunately, they don’t sell the version I demonstrated in the video anymore.
But here’s a work-around. You can buy the regular (non-Wordless-Book-colors) version of the Magic Coloring Book here and convert it to the Wordless book version fairly easily.
The exact Wordless Book colors version I used in the video is no longer for sale. But here’s a workaround:
- Buy the regular (non-Wordless-Book-colors) version of the Magic Coloring Book
- Cut out colored paper in the Wordless Book colors:
- Blue
- Red
- White
- Green
- Yellow
- Glue each colored sheet over the original pictures using a glue stick.
<image>
That’s it—you’ve got your own custom Appearing-Colors Wordless Book!
Your Turn:
Have fun sharing these with the kids at your church!
💬 Got your own creative Wordless Book idea? I’d love to hear it!
Send your idea through this contact form and you might see it featured in a future guide.
Creative Presentations for the Wordless Book: FAQ's
Who first used the Wordless Book?
Charles Spurgeon was the first to use the Wordless Book. In a sermon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle in 1866, he held up a “book” with nothing but colored pages and used it to present the Gospel. You can read Spurgeon’s Wordless Book sermon here.
What is the Wordless Book?
The Wordless Book is a simple gospel tool that uses colored pages to tell the story of salvation. Instead of lots of text, it has no words (hence the name) and just uses a sequence of five colored pages that represent key Bible truths, helping kids remember the message visually.
What do the Wordless Book colors mean?
- Yellow/Gold: God’s love for us and His desire for us to live with Him in Heaven (John 3:16)
- Blue/Black: the sin that breaks our relationship and separates us from God (Romans 3:23)
- Red: Jesus’ blood shed for us when He died on the cross to pay the penalty for our sins (Romans 5:8)
- White: the forgiveness and cleansing we receive when we believe in Jesus as our Savior (John 6:47)
- Green: Spiritual growth in our new life with God (John 14:21).
- Some presentations also add an optional “bonus” color for fun (for example, Orange: ‘Orange’ you glad God saved you?)
Do I need a special Wordless Book to share the gospel with kids?
No. You can use a purchased Wordless Book, or make your own by stapling colored construction paper or felt squares together. The power is in the clear gospel message the colors represent.
What is the simplest way to use the Wordless Book?
Use the classic method: flip through the colored pages in order and explain what each color represents. It’s simple, focused, and helps kids follow the gospel story without extra distractions.
What are some creative Wordless Book gospel presentations?
Creative wordless book presentations LEGO-based builds, a colored Jenga tower, gospel headbands, color-changing water cups, dyed eggs, human volunteers wearing color themes, balloon games, a flipbook, and magic props. Bookmark https://spyence.com/blogs/kids-church-blog-spyence-files/10-creative-wordless-book-gospel-presentations for all these ideas.
How do I use LEGO bricks for a Wordless Book gospel presentation?
Use LEGO bricks in the Wordless Book colors to build shapes or sections that illustrate each part of the gospel story as you explain the colors. A helpful approach is to start with the pieces separated and snap them together as the story unfolds so kids stay curious and engaged. See complete instructions from letthelittlechildrencome.com.
How do use color-changing water cups to share the Wordless Book Gospel presentation?
You place a few drops of food coloring in the bottom of clear cups (one color per cup), then pour clear water from a water pitcher. As the water fills each cup, it “magically” changes color, fascinating kids and letting you explain the gospel step-by-step as the colors appear.
What if I want a high-energy Wordless Book activity for a large group?
Try using our method of adult volunteers dressed in the gospel colors, or a balloon-based review game using helium vs. air-filled balloons. Both options grab kids’ attention and work great with a larger crowd.
How do I keep the Wordless Book message clear when using fun props?
Choose props that reinforce the wordless book Gospel presentation. Explain each color in simple, kid-friendly language. Ask simple comprehension questions to make sure your kids are understanding the message. And end with a clear invitation for kids to believe in Jesus as their Savior using a passage like John 6:47, Acts 16:31, or John 3:16."
