Teaching children about character and values can sometimes feel like an uphill battle, especially when the lessons come wrapped in long lectures or abstract concepts.
That’s where hands on, visual learning tools make all the difference.
This Fruit of the Spirit Craft Pack is a printable, A4 sized resource designed to turn a well known Bible passage Galatians 5:22-23 into a colorful, interactive activity that kids can touch, color, cut, and build.
What’s Inside the Pack
The set includes nine individual fruit and word pages, each pairing a cute, kawaii style fruit or food character with one of the nine Fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control.
Every page features the word spelled out in large bubble letters alongside a smiling fruit character an apple for love, an orange for joy, grapes for peace, a strawberry for patience, a lemon for kindness, a pear for goodness, a banana for faithfulness, a peach for gentleness, and a watermelon slice for self control.
A tenth page acts as a summary sheet, displaying all nine fruits together in a neat grid layout perfect as a final reference chart, a cover page, or a “matching key” once the individual pieces have been cut out and used.
Each illustration is drawn with dotted cut lines around the character and the lettering, signaling that these pages are meant to be cut apart into separate pieces a fruit shape and a word label for each virtue rather than colored as a single flat page.
This design choice is what transforms the pack from a simple coloring sheet into a true craft project.

The Concept Behind the Design
The pairing of friendly, expressive fruit faces with each virtue isn’t random it’s a deliberate teaching device that leans on the natural fruit metaphor already present in the Bible verse itself.
Children are visual and tactile learners, and associating an abstract idea like “gentleness” or “self control” with a specific, recognizable image (a peach, a watermelon) gives kids a memory anchor.
When a child later hears the word “patience,” the mental picture of a smiling strawberry can trigger recall of the lesson far more effectively than the word alone ever could.
The bubble letter word labels serve a dual purpose too. For younger children still learning to read, coloring in large, simple letterforms is great fine motor and pre literacy practice.
For older kids, matching the correct word to the correct fruit reinforces vocabulary and spelling in a low pressure, game like format.
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How to Use This Pack with Kids
There’s no single “correct” way to use this resource its flexibility is part of its appeal.
Here are several approaches depending on age group, group size, and available time.
Coloring and Cutting Session The most straightforward approach is to print each page on regular paper or card stock, hand out crayons, colored pencils, or markers, and let kids color both the fruit character and the word label.
Once colored, an adult or older child can help cut along the dotted lines using safety scissors. This works well for ages 4, 8 and takes about 15, 20 minutes per page.
Matching and Memory Game After all nine fruit and word pairs are cut out, mix up the pieces and have kids match each fruit character to its correct word.
This can be turned into a timed challenge, a small group competition, or a quiet individual activity.
It doubles as a memory verse review as each match is made, have the child say the word aloud and try to recite the order from Galatians 5:22-23.
Bulletin Board or Classroom Display The completed, colored pieces make for an attractive Sunday school, homeschool, or classroom bulletin board.
Arrange the nine fruits in order around a central title like “The Fruit of the Spirit” or “Growing in Character.”
This gives kids a sense of ownership and pride since they created the display pieces themselves, and it serves as a daily visual reminder of the nine virtues throughout a unit or semester.

Personal Mini Book or Folder Instead of a wall display, kids can glue or tape each colored fruit and its label onto separate pages of a small notebook or folder, creating a personalized “Fruit of the Spirit” book they can keep, take home, and revisit.
Adding a simple sentence or drawing about what each virtue means to them on the opposite page extends the activity into journaling and reflection.
Sequential Story Time Pairing For a more immersive lesson, work through one fruit per day or per week.
Read the relevant portion of Galatians 5, discuss what that particular virtue looks like in everyday situations (sharing a toy = kindness, waiting your turn = patience, saying sorry = gentleness), then have the child color and assemble that day’s fruit page as a hands on “seal” on the lesson.
By the end of nine sessions, the child has a complete set and a much deeper understanding of each term than a single lecture could provide.
Group Sorting Game For classroom or group settings, print multiple copies, cut everything out in advance, and scatter the pieces across a table.
Divide kids into small teams and have them race to sort and assemble all nine fruit and word pairs correctly, then place them in the order they appear in the Bible verse.
This adds a competitive, kinesthetic element that works particularly well for active learners who struggle to sit still during quieter activities.

Tips for Getting the Most Out of the Pack
Print on slightly heavier paper or card stock if the pieces will be handled repeatedly, laminate finished pieces for durability if they’ll be used as recurring classroom materials, and consider printing the tenth “all fruits” summary page first so kids have a reference for what the finished pieces should look like.
For younger children, pre cut the pages yourself and let them focus purely on coloring and assembling.
For older kids, let them practice scissor skills by cutting along the dotted lines themselves this builds fine motor coordination alongside the educational content.
[ >> DOWNLOAD THE FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT CRAFT PACK << ]
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