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Faith activity
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The Good Samaritan helping an injured man
Free printable The Good Samaritan helping an injured man coloring page for kids. A faith-filled Parables of Jesus 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 a custom page from your child's photo. Each personalized page includes printable line art and a soft color example.
Create My Child's PageAbout this coloring page
A man kneels beside an injured traveler on a rocky road. He's bandaging the traveler's wounds, and a donkey stands nearby loaded with supplies. In the distance, two other figures are walking away — a priest and a Levite who passed by without stopping. The road winds through a rocky landscape with a few sparse trees. This page captures the heart of the parable: the moment someone stopped when everyone else walked past. The injured man's wounds, the Samaritan's careful hands, the distant figures, and the road textures give kids a page full of moral weight and visual detail.
Suggested Scripture: Luke 10:33–34 (NIV) — But a Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the man was; and when he saw him, he took pity on him. He went to him and bandaged his wounds.
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.


Create a personalized Jesus coloring page
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, ask kids who the two people were who walked past. Then ask why they walked past. Most will say "they were too busy" — the real answer is more complicated (ritual purity laws).
- For ages 5–7: keep it simple. A hurt man needed help. Two people walked past. One stopped. Jesus said the one who stopped was the good neighbor.
- For Sunday school: focus on who the Samaritan was. Jews and Samaritans hated each other. Ask, "Why do you think Jesus made the hero someone the audience would have disliked?"
- For family devotion: read Luke 10:25–37. Then ask, "Who is our neighbor? Who's someone nearby who needs us to stop?"
Print and activity tips
- Color the Samaritan in warm, active tones — he's the one doing something.
- Color the two distant figures in cooler, more muted tones; they're moving away.
- Use warm tans and browns for the road; it should feel like a real, dangerous place.
Discussion questions
- The priest and the Levite were religious people. Why do you think they didn't stop?
- The Samaritan used his own oil, wine, and money to help a stranger. What does that cost him?
- Jesus asked, "Which of the three was a neighbor?" Why did He ask the question that way instead of "Who did the right thing?"
- Have you ever walked past someone who needed help? What stopped you?
- Who's one person near you right now who needs a "Good Samaritan"?



