Old Testament

Jonah Bible Puzzles and Printables

Jonah printable Bible puzzles, key verses, teaching ideas, and activity-pack links for Sunday school teachers, parents, homeschool use, and classroom Bible learning.

Book Overview

Jonah is the story of a reluctant prophet and God’s mercy toward Nineveh. Jonah sits in the Old Testament as book 32 of 66. For teachers and parents, that context matters because it shows where the book fits in the Bible timeline and how its message connects to the rest of Scripture. When children know whether a book belongs to Israel’s history, wisdom writing, the prophets, a Gospel, or a letter to the early church, the verses become easier to remember and easier to teach. This page is designed to help adults move from simple recognition of the book name to meaningful Bible learning with printable activities, guided reading, and verse-based discussion.

Key themes in Jonah include mercy, repentance, mission, obedience. Main characters often highlighted with children include Jonah, Ninevites. These people and themes give adults natural talking points for Sunday school, homeschool lessons, family devotions, and classroom review. Instead of treating a puzzle as a stand-alone worksheet, you can use the verse links below to explain what God is doing in the book, why the characters matter, and how each verse supports the big idea. That turns a printable into a lesson starter, memory verse review, small-group activity, or quiet follow-up task that still keeps the Bible text central.

Jonah is important for children because it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness. Puzzles work especially well here because they slow children down and keep attention on the actual words of the passage. A word search can introduce key vocabulary, a coloring puzzle can support younger learners, a cryptogram adds challenge for older children, and a fallen phrase gives a more logic-based way to rebuild the verse. As children work through verses from Jonah, adults can also guide them into Obadiah, Micah, Amos so the book is learned in connection with the wider Bible story rather than in isolation.

JonahNinevites

Start with the first verse word search, pair it with Books of the Bible Study Guides, and keep the lesson moving with Bible worksheets for kids.

Key Verses and Puzzle Links

Jonah 1:17

The LORD prepared a huge fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights.

Jonah 1:17 highlights themes such as mercy, repentance in language children can return to again and again. The verse is helpful in lessons because it connects the message of Jonah to a short, memorable part of Scripture. In simple terms, it helps learners notice that "The LORD prepared a huge fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights." belongs inside the bigger story of it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness.

Suggested Use: Use Jonah 1:17 as a memory verse, a lesson opener, a small-group discussion prompt, or a quick printable review activity for early finishers and take-home packs.

Jonah 2:9

But I will sacrifice to you with the voice of thanksgiving. I will pay that which I have vowed. Salvation belongs to the LORD .”

Jonah 2:9 highlights themes such as mercy, repentance in language children can return to again and again. The verse is helpful in lessons because it connects the message of Jonah to a short, memorable part of Scripture. In simple terms, it helps learners notice that "But I will sacrifice to you with the voice of thanksgiving. I will pay that which I have vowed. Salvation belongs to the LORD .”" belongs inside the bigger story of it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness.

Suggested Use: Use Jonah 2:9 as a memory verse, a lesson opener, a small-group discussion prompt, or a quick printable review activity for early finishers and take-home packs.

Jonah 3:10

God saw their works , that they turned from their evil way . God relented of the disaster which he said he would do to them , and he didn’t do it .

Jonah 3:10 highlights themes such as mercy, repentance in language children can return to again and again. The verse is helpful in lessons because it connects the message of Jonah to a short, memorable part of Scripture. In simple terms, it helps learners notice that "God saw their works , that they turned from their evil way . God relented of the disaster which he said he would do to them , and he didn..." belongs inside the bigger story of it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness.

Suggested Use: Use Jonah 3:10 as a memory verse, a lesson opener, a small-group discussion prompt, or a quick printable review activity for early finishers and take-home packs.

Jonah 4:2

He prayed to the LORD , and said , “ Please , LORD , wasn’t this what I said when I was still in my own country? Therefore I hurried to flee to Tarshish , for I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful , slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness , and you relent of doing harm .

Jonah 4:2 highlights themes such as mercy, repentance in language children can return to again and again. The verse is helpful in lessons because it connects the message of Jonah to a short, memorable part of Scripture. In simple terms, it helps learners notice that "He prayed to the LORD , and said , “ Please , LORD , wasn’t this what I said when I was still in my own country? Therefore I hurried to f..." belongs inside the bigger story of it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness.

Suggested Use: Use Jonah 4:2 as a memory verse, a lesson opener, a small-group discussion prompt, or a quick printable review activity for early finishers and take-home packs.

Jonah 4:11

Shouldn’t I be concerned for Nineveh , that great city , in which are more than one hundred twenty thousand persons who can ’t discern between their right hand and their left hand , and also many animals?”

Jonah 4:11 highlights themes such as mercy, repentance in language children can return to again and again. The verse is helpful in lessons because it connects the message of Jonah to a short, memorable part of Scripture. In simple terms, it helps learners notice that "Shouldn’t I be concerned for Nineveh , that great city , in which are more than one hundred twenty thousand persons who can ’t discern be..." belongs inside the bigger story of it reveals God’s compassion for people outside Israel and confronts hard-heartedness.

Suggested Use: Use Jonah 4:11 as a memory verse, a lesson opener, a small-group discussion prompt, or a quick printable review activity for early finishers and take-home packs.

Printable Bible Activity Pack

Jonah Activity Pack Includes

Combine verse-based puzzle pages with trusted supporting resources so the book can be taught as a small printable unit instead of a single worksheet.

Ways to Use These Bible Puzzles

These puzzles work well in several teaching settings. In Sunday school, use a key verse puzzle as the opening activity while children arrive, then return to the same verse during the main lesson so they can connect the worksheet with the Bible story. In homeschool or classroom settings, rotate between a word search for vocabulary, a coloring puzzle for younger learners, and a cryptogram or fallen phrase for children who are ready for more independent problem solving. This approach keeps the lesson active without losing the focus on Scripture.

You can also use Jonah puzzle pages for group review, memory verse reinforcement, and take-home practice. Ask children to explain why a word belongs in the verse, identify where a character such as Jonah, Ninevites appears in the story, or tell how the verse supports themes like mercy, repentance, mission. For mixed-age groups, let older children solve the more challenging puzzle types while younger children complete the coloring or word search versions. The result is a flexible, low-prep teaching tool that still feels intentional and Bible-centered.

After working through these activities, continue with Obadiah for more connected Bible reading and printable review.

Related Resources

Explore More Bible Books

Featured Puzzles

Word Search

Jonah 1:17 Word Search

Open the printable page for Jonah 1:17 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Cryptogram

Jonah 2:9 Cryptogram

Open the printable page for Jonah 2:9 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Cryptogram

Jonah 3:10 Cryptogram

Open the printable page for Jonah 3:10 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Fallen Phrase

Jonah 3:10 Fallen Phrase

Open the printable page for Jonah 3:10 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Fallen Phrase

Jonah 4:2 Fallen Phrase

Open the printable page for Jonah 4:2 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Word Search

Jonah 4:2 Word Search

Open the printable page for Jonah 4:2 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Word Search

Jonah 4:11 Word Search

Open the printable page for Jonah 4:11 and download the worksheet in PDF or PNG format.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Book of Jonah about?

Jonah is the story of a reluctant prophet and God’s mercy toward Nineveh. Teachers and parents often use the book to show children how themes like mercy, repentance, mission appear in the Bible story.

What are key Jonah Bible verses for kids?

The key verses on this page were chosen because they are memorable, teachable, and easy to use in puzzle-based review for church, homeschool, and classroom settings.

How can puzzles help with Bible learning in Jonah?

Puzzles help children slow down, notice repeated words, and remember the structure of the verse. They also make Scripture review easier to repeat without preparing a full lesson from scratch.

Who can use these Jonah printables?

These printables are designed for Sunday school teachers, parents, homeschool families, kids ministry leaders, released-time programs, and religious education classrooms.