Fun christian small group games




















Everyone takes turns pulling cards with the goal to be the first to get four of a kind ex. Once you do, take a candy cane as stealthily as possible. Once that happens, everyone else races to grab on of the remaining candy canes. The person who doesn't get a candy cane is eliminated. Do this until one winner remains.

Have participants put a "santa belly" under their shirt using a pillow. Place a limbo stick at a starting height. Then line up, and one by one try to limbo underneath with the Santa belly until everyone has tried. Slightly lower the stick and have those who made it through go again.

Continually lower the stick until one winner remains! Write down this list of Christmas carols on separate flash cards. Divide players into teams. One person draws from the pile of cards and has one minute to illustrate the Christmas carol.

If their team guesses correctly, they get one point. Make sure to alternate the team artist. Teams take turns until one reaches twenty points. First, print out this list of Christmas terms to act out. Separate everyone into teams, the get one person from each team to do the acting. Like regular charades, the actors are not allowed to talk or make signals of any letters.

Every time a team guesses correctly within the time limit, they get one point. The first team to get twenty points wins the game. Pick eight Christmas images ex.

Now place cards on the table in a 4x4 layout. Each player gets a chance to pick a card, then try to find the match. When a player finds the match, they keep it, get a point and get to try for another match. Play until someone reaches the predetermined amount of points to win. Players are broken up into teams. Make up questions from a list of holiday-themed survey responses for everyone to answer.

Each team is given an allotted time to write their three guesses on a piece of paper. The judge then reveals if their guesses were on the list and the value of their answers. The number one ranked survey response is worth 50 points, 40 if it's number two and so on. Once all the questions have been answered, the points are tallied to determine the winner. First, you need a host to put random items in a stocking.

Once it's stuffed, tie a ribbon or string around the top of the stocking so that no one can peek. Sit in a circle and pass it around to let everyone feel what's inside. Give them note cards so that they can write down their guesses. The person who guesses the most correct items wins.

First, grab some paper plates and markers. Players are blindfolded and hold their paper plate on top of their head. One person gives drawing instructions while everyone else tries to draw the Christmas scene they describe onto the plate. The most accurate drawing wins!

The game and its instructions are provided by Happy Home Fairy. Form two teams based on how many players there are. Place a Christmas stocking for each team on the other end of the room.

This relay continues until one team fills up their stocking to win the game. Draw or print out a picture of Rudolph and place it on the wall. And get a red circular piece of paper for his nose with a thumbtack or piece of tape.

Then blindfold the participant, spin them in a circle, then have them try to pin the nose on Rudolph. Mark their attempt with their name. Bible Pictionary. Use our mobile friendly Bible Pictionary Cards or download your free printable cards here.

Bible Pictionary is a classic game where your goal is to get your teammates to correctly identify what you have drawn. A timeless favorite. BibleGamesCentral April 15, Bible Charades. Use our mobile friendly Bible Charades Cards or download your free printable cards here.

Bible Charades is a great party game that you can also use to teach about love and faith in action. BibleGamesCentral January 16, Want More Bible Games? Click here to see All Bible Games for Adults.

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These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. The game is a familiar format, easy to learn and a lot of fun. Plus, the game format lends itself to prizes and other forms of recognition. Here is a free icebreaker Bingo card template you can play with.

In this game, eight individuals, each representing a different intelligence, are stranded on a desert island. Because the island has a finite amount of resources, your team must decide what order to eliminate the individuals in, in order to ensure survival. For similar ideas, check out this list of problem solving games.

While Speed Networking may seem better suited for large group icebreakers, this activity can also be reworked as an intimate icebreaker activity.

This exercise provides a fast and easy way for teams to get to know each other. To play Speed Networking, using a random team generator , pair your team into groups of two.

Then, give each pair icebreaker questions and five minutes to make their way through as many questions as possible. After five minutes are up, switch up the pairs. Since you are playing with a smaller group, you can cycle through the pairs more than once, so your colleagues can ask even more questions or simply chat about some information that came up in a previous question. Need help thinking of ways to break the ice? Check out our list of icebreaker questions for some pointers.

Hometown Map is an icebreaker game for work that is easy to set up. To start, pin a large world map to a bare stretch of wall and place a marker, small Post-It notes, and box of push pins nearby. Then, notify your team to use the push pins and Post-Its to mark birth places or hometowns on the map over the next few days. When your team members walk past the map, the pins may prompt your colleagues to ask each other about experiences growing up in different places.

Psychology Masks is another icebreaker activity pulled from Psychology that is especially suited for artistically inclined teams. To get started, order blank white masks and paints. Then, ask your team to fill the outside of the masks with images signifying what others think of them, and illustrate the inside with drawings that symbolize their inner selves.

Then, have the teams switch places and repeat the process. Keep track of which team guesses more words or phrases correctly, and offer the winning team a prize. Have one person start out by saying the name of a character from the Bible. The next person has to come up with a character from the Bible whose name starts with the last letter of the previously stated Bible character. Continue on with this until the group gets stumped or someone repeats a name. For a long list of every single name in the Bible plus their meaning as a bonus refer to this resource.

You will need an index card for each person in the group. Write the name of a popular Bible character on each index card. Pin the back of the index card onto the back of each person. Have everyone pair off into groups and ask each other questions to figure out whose name is pinned to their back. You can offer a prize to the first group who guesses all of their names correctly. This is similar to the traditional Bingo game, but instead of using numbers on the Bingo cards, use words or phrases from the Bible.

An announcer will shout out the word or phrase, and if it appears on their game card, the group member will check it off with a marker.

Give each group member a Bible and a list of items to find.



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