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PDF + PNG
Color guide
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Faith activity
Home or Sunday school
Abraham and Isaac on the mountain
Free printable Abraham and Isaac on the mountain coloring page for kids. A faith-filled Bible Stories design perfect for Sunday school, family devotion, and quiet time. Download and print for free.
Free • PDF / PNG • Letter size • Print-ready
Printable coloring page details
- Format
- PDF and PNG
- Paper size
- US Letter and A4
- Best for
- Sunday school, homeschool, quiet time
- Use
- Personal, family, classroom, church


Personalized keepsake
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Create My Child's PageAbout this coloring page
This is one of the more serious pages in the set, and it's drawn carefully. Abraham and his son Isaac are walking up a stone path on Mount Moriah, with Isaac carrying a bundle of wood on his back and Abraham holding a small fire pot. They're looking at each other mid-conversation. In the background, you can see the altar already partly built and a ram caught in a thicket nearby — the ram is small but visible, which is the page's quiet message. The mood is heavy without being scary, and the rocks and wood textures give kids steady, calming things to color while a hard story is being told.
Suggested Scripture: Genesis 22:14 (NIV) — So Abraham called that place The Lord Will Provide. And to this day it is said, "On the mountain of the Lord it will be provided."
The page is designed as a printable Christian coloring activity that can support a short Bible conversation, a family devotional moment, or a calm classroom activity.


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Want a coloring page with your child in a Bible-inspired scene? Upload a reference photo, choose a scene, and download a print-ready PDF plus HD PNG.
Create a personalized Jesus coloring pageTeaching ideas for parents and teachers
- Before coloring, just sit with the page. Ask, "What do you notice in the background that Abraham and Isaac don't see yet?" Most kids will spot the ram. That's the lesson.
- For ages 5–7: this story is hard for younger kids. Focus on the ending — God always had a plan, and Abraham didn't know it yet but kept walking. Skip the heavier theology for now.
- For Sunday school: ask, "Why do you think God asked Abraham to do something so hard? And why did He stop him before it happened?"
- For family devotion: read Genesis 22 together and connect it to the cross — this is a story Christians have read for two thousand years as a picture of what God Himself would later do.
Print and activity tips
- Color the ram last, after everything else is done. It makes its quiet appearance feel like a discovery.
- Use earthy browns and grays for the mountain — saving any bright colors for the small details, like Isaac's tunic.
- After coloring, ask kids to draw an arrow pointing to the ram and write one word above it. Many of them write "rescue."
Discussion questions
- This is one of the hardest stories in the Bible. What part is hardest for you to understand?
- Abraham didn't argue with God. Why do you think that was?
- Isaac was old enough to ask, "Where is the lamb?" but young enough to trust his father. What does that tell us about him?
- The ram was already there, waiting. What does it tell you about God that He had it ready before Abraham even climbed the mountain?
- Where in your life right now do you need to trust that God has something already prepared, even if you can't see it yet?



