Jesus is Tempted Sunday School Lesson for Kids
Use this children’s Sunday School lesson about the temptation of Jesus to
teach kids how Jesus overcame the devil's temptations.
Needed: Bibles
Intro Activity: Peer Pressure Playacting
Have students form groups of three. Give them a few minutes to think of how to act out a scene in which one or two of them pressure the other(s) to do something wrong, but then, the person resists them. Tell them to be creative in how they might say no to someone who’s trying to get them to do something wrong. Then, all the groups perform their scene for the class.
You can allow them to think of their own
scenarios or give them cue cards to base their scene on. Ideas include Smoking,
Drinking, Doing drugs, Stealing, Lying, Making fun of someone, Cheating,
Cursing, Telling a Dirty Joke, and Watching a TV Show they Shouldn’t.
Explain that sometimes, the devil uses other
people tempt us to do wrong things.
Lesson
Ask students, How many of you have ever done something wrong?
Does anyone know what we call it when we feel
like we want to do something wrong?
When we feel like we want to do something
wrong, that means we’re being tempted.
Jesus was also tempted to do some wrong
things. He never did the wrong things, but He was tempted to.
(Read Matthew
4:1-4.)
What did the devil tempt Jesus to do? (To turn
rocks into bread so that He could eat it.)
Jesus had fasted for 40 days and forty nights.
He hadn’t eaten anything for 40 days. Then, the devil came and tempted Him to
make rocks into bread because he knew that Jesus was really hungry. The devil
knew that Jesus would want food. And the devil knows what we want, too. That’s
how he knows what to tempt us with.
What would be wrong about Jesus turning rocks
into bread?
Jesus would be using His powers for Himself,
but God wanted Jesus to trust God to give Him food. God wants us to trust Him.
Jesus knew that it was more important to do what God wanted Him to do than to
make bread for Himself.
(Read Matthew
4:5-7.)
What did the devil tempt Jesus to do here?( To
jump off the roof of the Temple.)
The devil said that God would send the angels
to catch Jesus if He jumped. But if Jesus did that, He would be showing off. He
would be showing off that He could jump off the roof and have angels catch Him.
But God doesn’t want us to show off because that’s bragging about what we can
do and God doesn’t want us to do that.
(Read Matthew
4:8-11.)
What was the third thing the devil tempted
Jesus to do? (The devil said he would give Jesus everything in the world if
Jesus would worship the devil. )
Did Jesus do it? (No.)
Because who is the only one we’re supposed to
worship? (God.)
Jesus knew that we’re supposed to worship only
God. God is always most important. No matter what someone else can give you,
God is more important because God made you and God can make you live forever in
Heaven. No one else can make you, and no
one else can make you live forever.
Did you notice what Jesus kept saying after
all the times the devil tempted Him? He kept saying, “It is written,” and then,
He would say a Bible verse. Jesus was able to resist the devil’s temptations
because Jesus knew what the Bible said. He knew what the right things were that
God wants us to do. And that’s why we have to learn about the Bible. We need to
read the Bible so that we can know what God wants us to do and so that we can
resist the devil’s temptations.
Game: Resisting Temptation
Divide students into two teams for a slightly modified game of Red Rover. The teams line up facing each other on either side of your play area. They link hands with the students next to them.
You’ll call the name of one of the students
on Team A. That student must then break away from his team and try to break
through the linked hands of two members of Team B. If that student breaks
through, they get a point for their team.
If Team B resists the charging student, Team B gets
a point.
Next, call a student from Team B to try to
break through Team A’s line.
Play as long as time permits, alternating
which team is charging and which is defending.
At the end,
explain to students that a member of the opposite team is like a temptation
trying to get into our hearts. The devil sends temptations toward us all the
time because he wants us to do something wrong. But we have to be strong and
resist those temptations. We can’t let them break through.
Game: Sword Drill
Give each student a Bible. Then, call out the name of one of the books of the Bible. The student who finds that book first wins. To make it a little more difficult, you can call out the chapter and verse of a book or the name of a Biblical person or event.
Remind students
how important it is to read and study the Bible on their own so that they can
know it well.
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