Junior Ministry · Bible Activity
Four Corners: He Can Heal That!
A get-up-and-move game for juniors based on Jesus' healings in Capernaum and beyond
In this week's passages Jesus heals a man with leprosy, Peter's mother-in-law, a paralyzed man, and many more — and even forgives sins along the way. This activity gets kids on their feet and moving as they answer questions about those stories.
"He took up our infirmities and bore our diseases."
Matthew 8:17 (NIV), quoting Isaiah 53:4Setup — label your four corners
Post one sign in each corner of the room before kids arrive. Use paper, sticky notes, or a whiteboard — anything visible from across the room.
The man with leprosy
Peter's mother-in-law
The paralyzed man
The man with an evil spirit
How to play
- Kids stand in the middle of the room.
- The leader reads a clue or question aloud.
- Kids run to the corner they think matches the answer.
- The leader reveals the answer — anyone in the wrong corner sits out one round (or just stays and keeps playing for a no-elimination version).
- After all questions, anyone still standing wins!
Leader tip
For younger or smaller groups, skip elimination entirely — just have everyone return to the middle after each question and keep playing for fun. You can also let kids peek at their Bibles for the trickier questions to turn it into a race to look it up.
Questions
Read each clue aloud. Kids run to the matching corner.
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1 Jesus told this person, "I am willing — be clean!" and immediately the illness disappeared.Corner A The man with leprosy (Matthew 8:3)
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2 Jesus healed this person by taking them by the hand and helping them up. Right away they got up and started serving food.Corner B Peter's mother-in-law (Mark 1:31)
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3 This person was brought to Jesus by four friends who made a hole in the roof to lower them down because the crowd was too big.Corner C The paralyzed man (Mark 2:3–4)
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4 This healing happened in the synagogue on the Sabbath. The evil spirit shouted out before Jesus commanded it to leave.Corner D The man with an evil spirit (Mark 1:23–26)
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5 When Jesus healed this person, He said something that shocked the religious leaders: "Your sins are forgiven."Corner C The paralyzed man (Matthew 9:2)
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6 Jesus told this person not to tell anyone — but instead they went out and spread the news everywhere.Corner A The man with leprosy (Mark 1:44–45)
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7 Jesus healed this person the same evening that news spread through the whole town — and crowds gathered at the door bringing everyone who was sick.Corner B Peter's mother-in-law — the healings that followed (Mark 1:32–34)
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8 The evil spirit that Jesus commanded called out, "I know who you are — the Holy One of God!" Jesus told it to be quiet.Corner D The man with an evil spirit (Luke 4:34–35)
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9 Jesus sent this person to the priest and told them to offer the gift that Moses commanded, as a testimony.Corner A The man with leprosy (Matthew 8:4)
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10 After this healing, the crowd who watched were filled with awe and praised God, saying, "We have never seen anything like this!"Corner C The paralyzed man (Mark 2:12)
Closing discussion (2 minutes)
- Which healing surprised you most — and why?
- Jesus forgave sins and healed bodies. What does that tell us about what He came to do?
- The friends of the paralyzed man went to a lot of effort to get him to Jesus. Who in your life might need someone to bring them to Jesus?
Big idea
Jesus healed people no one else could help — lepers, the paralyzed, the demon-possessed — and He did it with authority and compassion. His power over sickness and sin shows that He is exactly who He claimed to be. No one is too broken, too sick, or too far gone for Jesus to heal.
Additional reading: The Desire of Ages, pp. 244–271