Icebreakers for Christian gatherings help participants of every age relax and get ready for study, fun, or fellowship. We have divided our selection of Christian icebreakers by age group to make it easy for you to find the perfect one for any size, age, or group composition.

More awesome games can be found in article 10 GREAT Sunday School & Bible Games for Kids

Try our Bible Trivia Quiz

Christian Icebreaker Games for Adults

I Am Blessed

I Am Blessedis an excellent icebreaker game for an adult group of Christians get to know each other better. It gives participants the chance to share something about their lives.

  1. Start with a volunteer and have them give their name and a reason he or she feels blessed.
  2. Continue around the room, asking each person to say the same thing.
  3. The only rule is that each person should have a new and different blessing.

Autographs

A Christian icebreaker game that is fun and teaches adult players something about the members of the group, Autographs takes a bit of preparation. Once you have your sheet created, you can use it multiple times. Create an autograph sheet with lines and 15 to 20 different statements that some of the people in the room can do, but probably not most of them. Leave a line below each statement for an autograph. Some examples are, “Recite the books in the Old Testament.” or “Sing the third stanza to ‘How Great Thou Art’.” Each person is to find someone in the room who will perform the task. However, they can only use each name once. The people who perform the task are to sign next to that statement. The first person who fills the entire sheet with signatures is the winner.

Crazy Poker

Crazy Poker

Begin this run Christian icebreaker with the players seated in a circle. Give each person a card from a deck without letting seeing the card and place it on the forehead, allowing all to see. The players can then advise each other to change cards. The goal is to advise those with a big cards (i.e. King or Ace) to change to another card, because the person with the smallest card loses. Each time a person loses, they are out. The winner is the last player left – the one with the smallest card.

Market Memory

Those colored multi-page grocery store ads become the tools for this fun icebreaker game.

  1. Divide your group into teams.
  2. Pass out the store ads and give players 3 minutes to look through it.
  3. The leader will ask questions (For example, how much per pound, what brand of noodles is on sale, etc.) and the first person who raises his or her hand will get to answer.
  4. The team with the most answers wins.

Picture Me

As the adults arrive, have each write their name on a slip of paper and place the slips in a bowl, basket or bag. When you are ready to break the ice, have everyone draw a name. They are to keep the name they drew secret and if they choose their own name, they must put it back and choose another. Pass out plain white paper and a pencil to each person. They are to draw a picture of the person whose name they drew. When everyone is finished drawing, the leader shares the pictures with the group and they guess whose picture it is. You may need to have everyone introduce themselves before drawing begins if you group does not know each other well.


Teen Christian Icebreaker Games

Snowball Fight

This Christian teen activity needs to take place in a large enclosed area or outside. You will need several small soft balls. You may need to wrap the ball in tap to make it heavy enough to fly through the air. Divide you group into two teams and give each team half of the balls. Divide the area into two halves with tap or spray the grass with a paint line. If you are in a gym, simply have each team on half the court. Each team must stay on their side. Each team throws balls at the other team and tries to hit them. If a person is hit by the other team’s ball, they are out. However, if the ball is caught, the thrower is out. The game ends when one team’s members are all out, or you can set a time limit.

Paperclip Links

Paperclip Links

A fun icebreaker that starts as the teens first enter the room for the evening, this game is guaranteed to get the group warmed up and mingling. You will need a great number of paperclips for this icebreaker game, so be ready. Give each teen ten (or more!) paperclips when they arrive. Tell the first three they are the team leaders and cannot connect with each other. The goal is to get the teens to join their group and create the largest chain of paperclips. The team with longest chain of paperclips wins.

Bible Basketball

This is an excellent icebreaker for Bible review.

  1. Have all the teens put their chairs into a square with the same number of chairs on each side. Put a large plastic trashcan or wastepaper basket in the middle of the square.
  2. The leader can either think of a Bible related question or have some available on a sheet of paper prepared in advance.
  3. As you ask a question, the first teen to raise their hand gets to answer it.
  4. If they are correct, they get to shoot a basketball into the “basket.” If they miss, the person the ball rolls closest to gets to answer the next questions.
  5. No one can get up to retrieve the ball until it stops rolling.

You can play this as a team game with each side as a team and the winning team being the one with the most points.


Christian Icebreaker Games for Kids

Buzz Bomb Balloon

  1. To begin this Christian children’s icebreaker game, have the children stand in a large circle.
  2. Give each child a balloon that is not inflated.
  3. Place a target in the middle of the circle – a large piece of colored construction works well or you can simple put a circle on the floor with masking tape.
  4. The children should be about ten feet away from the target.
  5. Have each child blow up the balloon and hold it shut.
  6. Either give the children different colors or write their initials on the balloons with permanent markers so you can tell who gets closest to the target.
  7. When the leader yells, “Go!” the children are to let go of their balloons and see whose balloon lands closest to the target.

Use this game for teams by having the two teams face each other and put the target between them.

Frisbee Toss

A simple, but fun icebreaker game for children, you will need two hula hoops and six Frisbees. You can either suspend the hula hoops from the ceiling or have some volunteer adults hold them up in the air. Divide your group into teams and have each player take a turn with three chances to toss the Frisbee through the hula hoop. The team with the most points at the end of a specific time wins.

Cotton Ball Scoop

A game suitable for teams or for using with two volunteers, this children’s church ice breaker provides a great deal of fun. You will need two large bowls filled with cotton, two empty bowls, two blindfolds, and two spoons. The children are given 30 seconds to transfer cotton balls from the full bowl to an empty bowl. Since the cotton balls are so light, many times the participants think they have cotton balls in their spoons when they are really empty. If you use it as a team game, the winning team is the one with the most cotton balls.

More Christian icebreaker games for kids may be found in our article Youth Ministry Games


Christian Icebreaker Games for Any Age

Bible Scavenger Hunt

Bible Scavenger Hunt

Divide your group into teams and make sure each team member has a Bible. Give the name of a Bible person, place, or thing and see which team is able to find the scriptural reference first. If you wish, you can allow the participants to use a concordance if their Bible has one. You can make some of them easy and some hard and vary difficulty based upon the age and knowledge of your group. This icebreaker can also be used at the beginning and end of a Bible class for lesson review.

If I Were

One great icebreaker game that works well with Christian groups is If I Were. The group simply takes turns saying statements that begin with “If I were . . .” For example, “If I were a flower, I would be a daisy, because it is simple and pretty.” Some other categories are, “If I were a . . . food, animal, President, song, movie, book, car, airline, city, country, etc.” For younger children, it might be best to give the prompt and let them finish the statement. Sometimes you get some really funny statements that will make everyone laugh.

Pass the Present

An excellent game for any age, this Christian icebreaker game is fun and has a prize at the end. Have the players either sit or stand in a circle. You will need a paper wrapped package and a way to play music. The goal of the game is not to have the present when the music stops. To prepare for this fun game, you need to choose an age appropriate prize and wrap it in multiple layers of paper. You can use as many layers as you wish. The more layers of paper you have, the longer the game will last. On each paper, write a funny action or activity. The person who has the package when the music stops must remove one layer of paper and do the action or activity. After they have finished, the music starts again and the present keeps going around the circle. The person who unwraps the last layer keeps the gift. We have listed some activity suggestions below to write on the paper layers, or you can choose your own:

  • Sing a song
  • Do a dance
  • Tell a joke
  • Make a funny face
  • Pat your head while rubbing your stomach

Christian Icebreaker Questions

Questions are also an excellent way to break the ice and we have created a list of Christian icebreaker questions for you to use.

  • If you could change places with a Bible character, whom would you choose? Why?
  • If you could add two commandments to the existing ten, what would they be?
  • If you could break one of the commandments, which would it be and why?
  • What is your favorite book of the Bible? Why?
  • If you could perform miracles, what would you do?
  • Which souls of our society do you think need the most help?
  • Have you had a prayer answered lately? Share the story.
  • Who has been the greatest influence on your Christian life and why?
  • What do you think delights God above everything else?
  • What made you decide to attend this church?
  • How would your life be different if you knew Jesus was returning later today?
  • Share about a spiritual experience you have had.
  • If God was about to send a thunderbolt from the sky to strike someone down, who do you think would be struck?
  • What do you not want said at your funeral?
  • Besides murder and violence – what do you think is the worst kind of sin?
  • What is your most favorite bible you have received? Why?
  • When you think about God – what is the first thing that comes to mind?
  • What are your biggest questions about your relationship with God?
  • When is it most difficult to trust God?
  • What are the best parts about being a part of your congregation?
  • What have you learned recently from another Christian?
  • Who is your favorite Christian that is a celebrity?
  • Whom would you turn to if you were in desperate need of help?
  • What turns you on spiritually?
  • Do you believe everything happens for a reason?
  • What would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?
  • Do you feel you have a purpose or calling in life?
  • What do you think the secret to a good life is?

You may also have a look on our huge list of general icebreaker questions.

Enjoyment is an important component for Christian activities and our selection of icebreaker games and activities for Christian groups provide an excellent way to make any Christian get-together fun and memorable.