Sunday School

7 Exciting Walls of Jericho Crafts for Kids

The story of the Walls of Jericho carries a steady message of courage, unity, and confident faith.

When children engage with this moment through simple, thoughtful crafts, the learning becomes vivid and meaningful.

Hands-on activities invite them to explore the sounds, movements, and symbols within the story in a way that feels approachable and joy-filled.

In this post, you’ll find seven exciting Walls of Jericho crafts designed to spark curiosity and support understanding.

These activities encourage creativity, teamwork, and purposeful conversation – helping kids connect the story to real values they can carry into everyday life.

What Children Learn From These Crafts

Each craft inspired by the Walls of Jericho supports meaningful growth in a child’s learning journey.

These activities invite children to observe details, follow sequences, and express ideas with clarity.

The crafts also nurture collaboration.

Many of the projects encourage kids to work side by side, share materials, and move through steps together – mirroring the unity woven throughout the Jericho story.

Creative choices, from designing trumpets to shaping “walls,” give children space to explore their imagination with purpose.

Most importantly, these hands-on moments help kids connect the story’s values to their own lives.

Ideas like courage, teamwork, trust, and joyful praise become easier to recognize when experienced through movement and creativity.

If you’re looking for more ways to bring Bible stories to life, try these easy Bible craft for kids that are perfect for hands-on learning and fun.

7 Fun Walls of Jericho Crafts for Kids

These 7 exciting Walls of Jericho crafts will spark imagination, encourage learning, and give children a tangible way to connect with this timeless story.

1. Cardboard Jericho Wall Blocks

a sturdy, handcrafted wall made from small cardboard rectangles and recycled boxes, arranged in stacked layers to resemble the walls of Jericho


A sturdy, easy-to-build craft that lets kids create their own Jericho walls for storytelling and imaginative play.

Materials:

  • Cardboard pieces or small recycled boxes
  • Scissors
  • Markers or crayons
  • Tape or school glue
  • Optional: textured paper or brown construction paper

Steps:

  1. Cut cardboard into brick-sized rectangles or gather small boxes as ready-made “blocks.”
  2. Decorate each piece with stone-like patterns, simple lines, or color blocks to resemble a strong wall.
  3. Tape or glue layers together to create a tall, steady wall structure.
  4. Arrange the finished blocks into a full “wall” that kids can use while retelling the story.

Want more hands-on ways to bring God’s Word to life? Try meaningful crafts that teach the 10 commandments.

2. Jericho March Drum

two colorful homemade toy drums crafted from recycled materials


This craft gives children a steady, rhythmic way to represent the marching around Jericho.

The gentle drumming supports focus, movement, and storytelling.

Materials:

  • Empty oatmeal container or coffee can with lid
  • Construction paper
  • Tape or school glue
  • Markers or crayons
  • Two craft sticks or unsharpened pencils for drum “mallets”
  • Cotton balls (optional for softer sound)

Steps:

  1. Wrap the container with construction paper and secure it with tape or glue.
  2. Decorate the drum with simple patterns, encouraging words, or symbols connected to the story.
  3. For soft mallets, tape a cotton ball to the end of each craft stick or pencil.
  4. Close the lid tightly to complete the drum.
  5. Invite children to tap a steady marching rhythm as they move around their crafted “city,” just like the Israelites in the story.

Looking for more hands-on ways to explore Bible stories with kids? Try hands-on crafts to teach children about Jesus’ disciples.

3. Jericho March Path Map

a handmade "Jericho March Path Map" crafted as a children’s educational diorama


This craft helps children visualize the journey around Jericho by creating a simple top-down map.

It supports sequencing, spatial awareness, and clear storytelling.

Materials:

  • Large sheet of paper or cardstock
  • Markers or crayons
  • Small pieces of brown or tan paper for “walls”
  • Glue stick
  • Optional: stickers or small arrows for direction marks

Steps:

  1. Draw a large circle or square in the center of the paper to represent the city of Jericho.
  2. Cut small strips of brown or tan paper and glue them around the shape to form the city walls.
  3. Add a path around the walls, wide enough to show where the Israelites marched.
  4. Mark seven simple direction cues (dots, arrows, or footprints) to represent each lap around the city.
  5. Encourage children to trace the path with their finger as they retell the sequence of the story.

Want more fun, hands-on ideas for little learners? Try engaging Sunday school crafts for toddlers.

4. Seven-Day Jericho Countdown Chain

a handmade children’s Bible craft called the "Seven-Day Jericho Countdown Chain."


This craft highlights the steady rhythm of the seven days of marching. Each link represents one day, giving children a clear visual of the story’s pace and progression.

Materials:

  • Assorted colors of construction paper
  • Scissors
  • Glue stick or tape
  • Markers or crayons

Steps:

  1. Cut construction paper into seven long strips.
  2. Label each strip with a simple number from 1 to 7.
  3. Decorate the strips with patterns, colors, or small drawings connected to the story.
  4. Form the first strip into a loop and secure it with glue or tape.
  5. Add each additional strip by looping it through the previous one until all seven are connected.
  6. Invite children to point to or move through each link as they explain what happens on each of the seven days.

Looking for more hands-on ways to keep kids engaged and learning? Check out irresistible felt craft ideas for kids.

5. Jericho Wall Crumble Mosaic

a children's handmade Bible craft titled the "Jericho Wall Crumble Mosaic."


This craft gives children a hands-on way to show the moment the walls of Jericho collapsed. The mosaic design keeps the activity structured while still allowing room for creativity and movement.

Materials:

  • Cardstock or a sturdy sheet of paper
  • Brown or gray construction paper
  • Glue stick
  • Scissors
  • Optional: small pebbles or textured paper for added dimension

Steps:

  1. Cut construction paper into small squares or rectangles to represent stone blocks.
  2. Arrange the pieces on the cardstock in tight rows to form a strong, complete “wall.”
  3. Glue most of the pieces down, leaving a few loose or slightly lifted to represent the sections that will “fall.”
  4. Add optional textured pieces or small pebbles along the base of the wall for depth.
  5. Invite children to gently lift or slide the loose pieces when they reach the part of the story where the wall crumbles.

Want more simple, budget-friendly ways to bring Bible stories to life? Try easy Sunday school crafts on a budget.

6. Jericho March Footprint Trail Cards

a finished children's craft called "Jericho March Footprint Trail Cards."


This craft gives children a set of simple “footprint cards” they can place in a circle to act out the seven marches around Jericho.

It strengthens sequencing and brings movement into the story.

Materials:

  • Cardstock
  • Scissors
  • Markers or crayons
  • Optional: stickers or small arrow symbols

Steps:

  1. Cut the cardstock into small rectangles – about the size of playing cards.
  2. Draw a pair of footprints on each card. Keep the design simple and easy for kids to recognize.
  3. Add small arrows or patterns if you’d like to show direction around the city.
  4. Create a set of 7–10 cards so children can lay them out in a full circle or large loop.
  5. Invite kids to place the cards around their crafted “city” and follow the path with steady steps as they retell the story.

7. Victory Banner Flags

"Victory Banner Flags" inspired by the fall of Jericho. Handcrafted triangular flags made from colorful construction paper in bright, primary shades (red, blue, yellow, green), some with soft gradient blending


This craft celebrates the triumphant moment after the walls fell.

Children create a simple flag that highlights the values woven through the story – courage, unity, and joyful praise.

Materials:

  • Felt or construction paper
  • Craft stick or straw
  • Tape or school glue
  • Markers or fabric crayons
  • Optional: ribbon or small paper shapes for decoration

Steps:

  1. Cut a rectangle or triangle from felt or construction paper to form the base of the flag.
  2. Write an uplifting word in the center – such as courage, joy, or faith.
  3. Decorate the edges with clean lines, simple shapes, or color blocks.
  4. Attach the flag to a craft stick or straw using glue or tape.
  5. Invite children to lift their flags during story review as a reminder of the confident victory at Jericho.

If you’re looking for seasonal, hands-on activities for little learners, check out my guide on fun winter Sunday school crafts for kids.

Bring the Walls of Jericho Story to Life With Purposeful Craft Time

Hands-on projects offer children a steady way to engage with Scripture in a memorable, grounded manner.

These Walls of Jericho crafts invite movement, curiosity, and thoughtful creativity – allowing kids to connect the story’s rhythm and meaning to experiences they can see and feel.

Whether you use one activity or all seven, each project supports confident learning and joyful conversation.

If you try any of these crafts at home, in the classroom, or during Sunday school, I’d love to hear how it went.

Share your experience in the comments below!

Get the FREE Fruit of the Spirit Tree Craft

Bring the Fruit of the Spirit to life with this FREE Fruit of the Spirit Tree Craft—a fun, hands-on printable kids can build and display.

It features a 3D accordion-fold tree and comes in two versions (one with Bible verses for each fruit from Galatians 5:22–23, and one simplified for younger kids). This makes it easy for children to learn love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control at their own pace.

Click below to grab the free tree craft and start creating together.

FAQs

1. What age group works best for Walls of Jericho crafts?

Most of these activities work well for ages 3–10. Younger children enjoy the movement-focused crafts, while older kids appreciate the building and mapping projects.

2. How can I adapt these crafts for a large Sunday school group?

Prepare materials in simple trays or stations, use pre-cut pieces, and choose crafts that involve shared effort such as the countdown chain or footprint trail.

3. Are there ways to tie these crafts into a short lesson or devotional?

Yes. Introduce one value – courage, unity, praise, or trust – then connect it to the craft before beginning. This helps kids understand the purpose behind the activity.

4. What if I want to make these crafts part of a weeklong theme?

Use one craft per day, ending with a group retelling of the story using the wall blocks, footprint trail, and victory flags together.

5. How can I keep the crafts organized when working with multiple kids?

Use labeled bins for materials, assign each child a work spot, and keep completed crafts in large envelopes or clipboards for easy storage.

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