Parable of The Good Samaritan (Love Your Neighbor Lesson) Luke 10:25-27

by Tony Kummer | Lesson Plans | Print Print | Email

This Sunday School Lesson for children can be used in Sunday school or Children’s church. It is based on Luke 10:25-27 where Jesus tells the parable of the Good Samaritan. The point is that we must love our neighbors and the story hints at the mission of Jesus to rescue us too.

Use this link to Print Print this lesson plan for your ministry. Your feedback is welcomed, just leave a comment below.

Need More Help? You can watch a video of the Good Samaritan Bible Story. You could show this to your class or learn a good approach for telling this story to children.

Luke 10:25-27 Sunday School Lesson: The Parable of The Good Samaritan (Love Your Neighbor)

Learning Objectives: After this lesson, children will demonstrate understanding of Parable of the Good Samaritan, by giving personal examples of how they could love their neighbors.

Target Age: Kindergarten – 5th

Teaching Setting: This lesson was first taught in our broadly graded children’s church on Sunday morning to about 35 children. Our kids begin in the sanctuary with their families and are dismissed to children’s church before the pastor’s sermon. Before the lesson the children participate in several songs and group Bible memory exercises. I aim for no longer than 15-25 minutes with each lesson plan depending on learning activities.

Items Needed:

  • Marked Bible for this passage. Prepare the copy in advance by highlighting the significant points to emphasize. Underlining words or ideas that will need additional explanation. I typically make small notes in the margin.
  • If you prefer, you can use visual aids to help tell the story.
  • A marker board or piece of paper displaying the word “love” large enough for the class to see.
  • Love Your Neighbor coloring activity

Explanation: This text begins with Jesus’ conversation with a Jewish teacher of the Law. After Jesus taught the great commandments, the man was trying to justify himself. His questions were aimed to lower the ethic bar Jesus had presented him.

So, the Great Teacher tells a story to make the point stick. This is a wonderful story for creative expression. It speaks to our prejudice and hard hearts toward suffering. In the context, Jesus is showing the Kingdom of God consists in action – not just talk.

This is a great story to use creative teaching methods. Have fun!

One Page Teaching Plan

The Parable of the Good Samaritan – Love Your Neighbors
Luke 10:25 – 37

Hook

Write the word “love” on the board (or a piece of paper to display). Ask the children to close their eyes and imagine someone they love. Then, take volunteer answers. Try to restate the children’s answers into statements about who we should love.

  • If a child says “mom” … you say “Good answer, we should love our moms – God wants us to love our moms.
  • If a child says “friends” … you say “Good answer, we should love our friends – God wants us to love our friends.

Say: These are all good answers, but today we are going to learn that God wants us to love everyone in our lives. Even people that we normally wouldn’t like!

Book

Active Listening: In the story we are going to read from the Bible, Jesus tells a man what it really means to love your neighbor. In that story there are three characters. Listen carefully to see which person really showed love.

Read (and summarize) Luke 10:25-37. Be sure to engage the children with good story telling. Characters the children are listening for:

  1. Priest
  2. Levite
  3. Samaritan

Another Way To Say: Jesus said that we should love our neighbors as ourselves. Have volunteers suggest another way to say the same thing with different words.

Look/Took:

Agree or Disagree: Tell the children that you are going to read some statements that might be ways to love your neighbor. Ask them to stand if they agree. If they disagree they should sit down with arms crossed. Relate each example back to the idea of loving your neighbor.

  1. We don’t need to help people if we are watching our favorite TV show.
  2. We should be extra nice to kids at school who have trouble making friends.
  3. We should obey our parents right away.

Act It Out: Ask for volunteers to act out the story. For variation, assign several older students as ‘project leaders’ to coach a group of younger students to act out the parable.

Test: Ask for volunteers to suggest ways they can show love to people in their lives.

Prayer: Lead the children in a time of prayer.

Related posts:

  1. Effective Sunday School Teaching Starts With Love

{ 38 comments… read them below or add one }

Deb October 11, 2008 at 11:22 pm

Thank you so much for the lesson on The Good Samaritan. I was in a crunch and I decided to try to find a lesson on the web. I ranned accross you site this lesson was truely a blessing. Thank you so much.

Reply

Kim September 20, 2008 at 10:36 pm

What an awesome site!!! I was looking for something on The Good Samaritan and googled it. ( for children) I kept looking and looking and was ready to give up and I said Lord help me find something soon or I am going to bed and forget about it. The very next site I looked was yours and it was great. thanks for all you do people like me who want to serve.
God bless!

In Him,
Kim

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Helen August 19, 2008 at 11:13 pm

I’ve been looking everywhere for help with teaching children’s church. I just started this month and my group ranges in age from 4 yrs to 9 yrs. What I’ve seen on your site so far looks great and I can’t wait to try it out this sunday. Our group meets anywhere from 30-45 minutes so it would be nice to have a craft to go along with the lessons. Any suggestions would be great. Thanks for your help

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L. Clair August 17, 2008 at 8:50 am

Thank you for the ideas. They are very helpful. It was such a blessing to come across your website.

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Tony Kummer July 30, 2008 at 2:23 pm

@sheilla: Thanks for your encouraging comment. Sometime next month, I’ll start posting new lesson plans. I wasn’t sure if they were helpful, but I appreciate the positive feedback.

May God bless you and your church.

Reply

sheilla July 30, 2008 at 10:57 am

I wanted to stop in and say thanks for the great lesson. Occasionally I teach class on Wednesday nights, at our church, and this week i had no clue on what to teach. I found this and fell in love with this site. If you search the web you can also find crafts or projects to do. Thanks again
Sheilla

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Esther July 11, 2008 at 10:14 am

I’m going to try this Sunday, 7/13/08 as this will be my first Sunday to teach. We have approximately 30 mintues. It would be nice if you had a craft to do during this time or something the children could take with them. I’m not creative so all the help I can get is very helpful. I only have to teach every fifth week. Looking forward to hearing from you. Praying this will be beneficial to our kids. Thanks for this website.

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Natalene June 23, 2008 at 9:30 pm

Thanks for providing this kind of information. God bless you and your team as u continue to work in His kingdom.

Reply

Hanna April 28, 2008 at 7:39 pm

I was looking for an lesson that my children that I teach would enjoy. I started last week and they seemed bored. This lesson is great and I can’t wait to try this one out.

Reply

collet April 17, 2008 at 5:40 pm

This is a wonderful way to tell this story. I was actually look for crafts to use with the story I had. This gave me some creative and fresh idea. Thank you very much.

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