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PDF + PNG
Color guide
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Faith activity
Home or Sunday school
A cross with Easter lilies
Free printable A cross with Easter lilies coloring page for kids. A faith-filled Jesus and The Cross design perfect for Sunday school, family devotion, and quiet time. Download and print for free.
Free • PDF / PNG • Letter size • Print-ready
Printable coloring page details
- Format
- PDF and PNG
- Paper size
- US Letter and A4
- Best for
- Sunday school, homeschool, quiet time
- Use
- Personal, family, classroom, church


Personalized keepsake
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Create a custom page from your child's photo. Each personalized page includes printable line art and a soft color example.
Create My Child's PageAbout this coloring page
A wooden cross stands tall in this page with three white Easter lilies blooming at its base. The lilies are drawn with full open petals and long stems, leaning slightly toward the cross. Soft rays of light spread out behind the whole composition, suggesting morning. There are no figures, just the cross, the flowers, and the light. The cross brings the weight of Friday; the lilies bring the joy of Sunday. The two together tell the entire Easter story without a single word. The detailed petals on the lilies give kids fine work to focus on while the cross stays steady and simple at the center.
Suggested Scripture: Romans 6:5 (NIV) — For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we will certainly also be united with him in a resurrection like his.
The page is designed as a printable Christian coloring activity that can support a short Bible conversation, a family devotional moment, or a calm classroom activity.


Create a personalized Jesus coloring page
Want a coloring page with your child in a Bible-inspired scene? Upload a reference photo, choose a scene, and download a print-ready PDF plus HD PNG.
Create a personalized Jesus coloring pageTeaching ideas for parents and teachers
- Before coloring, ask kids why the Easter lily and the cross are drawn together. They should figure it out: the cross is Friday, the lily is Sunday.
- For ages 5–7: this is a good page for closing out an Easter unit. Talk about how sad Friday led to happy Sunday — and that's the whole story.
- For Sunday school: focus on the verse above. Ask, "What does it mean to be 'united' with Jesus in His death? And in His resurrection?"
- For family devotion: read Romans 6:1–11. Ask, "What's one old thing in our family that needs to die so something new can grow?"
Print and activity tips
- Keep the lilies pure white — no shading, no color, just clean petals.
- Color the cross in warm browns; pair it with the lilies' coolness.
- Use a pale yellow wash for the light behind the whole scene; the page should feel like dawn.
Discussion questions
- The cross and the lily mean two very different things. Why are they better together?
- The lily grows from a buried bulb. The cross grew from a dead tree. What do these two facts have in common?
- Easter morning came after the saddest day in history. Has that ever happened in your life — joy that came right after hard things?
- If you had to pick one of these two — the cross or the lily — to wear as a necklace, which would you pick? Why?
- Romans 6:5 says we're "united" with Jesus. What do you think it feels like to be united with someone you can't see?



