15 Free Corpus Christi Coloring Pages That Show Every Family at the Table

Follow us on PinterestFollow

Sixty days after Easter, the Catholic calendar marks a feast most children have never colored before. Corpus Christi — the Body of Christ — is one of the most visually rich celebrations in the liturgical year: processions, candles, flowers, families gathered in one place.

And yet the corpus christi coloring pages you find online are almost always a single monstrance on a white background.

These fifteen pages were drawn differently. Diverse families, intergenerational community, and scripture-anchored scenes — created so every child can find themselves in the Body of Christ, not just learn the vocabulary of it.

A Note from Louisa (Founder of MyKidColors)

As an adult convert to Catholicism, I am still learning the richness and depth behind different feasts, traditions, and moments in the Church. Corpus Christi is one of those observances that makes you slow down and reflect on the Eucharist with fresh attention.

This story is part of something bigger…

Inclusive Bible Moments Coloring Book

If your child connected with this story, they’ll love the full collection.

This isn’t just coloring.
It’s quiet, faith-filled moments where kids see themselves in Scripture.

Inside you’ll find:

  • 25 hand-drawn Bible scenes rooted in real stories
  • Representation that helps children feel seen and included
  • Devotional-style pages that invite calm, reflection, and conversation
  • Easy, print-and-use pages for busy days

Less screen time. More soul time.

What I appreciate about faith-based coloring pages is that they can give children a visual, hands-on way to connect with truths that are big and sacred. Sometimes a child colors first, asks questions second, and remembers the lesson more deeply because their hands were part of it.

That is what I wanted this Corpus Christi set to do: create a quiet, reverent, child-friendly way to reflect on Jesus in the Eucharist and the beauty of Catholic worship.

Conversation Corner: 3 Questions to Ask While Coloring

Turn this activity into a bonding moment. While your child colors, try asking these questions:

  1. For “Unified People & Purpose” (Page 1): “What do you think people can accomplish when they work together toward the same goal?”
  2. For “Symbolic Procession: Lamb & Flock” (Page 8): “Why do you think Jesus is sometimes called the Lamb of God?”
  3. For “All Hands Build the Kingdom” (Page 15): “What gifts has God given you that can help others in your family, church, or community?”

The Collection: 15 Free Corpus Christi Coloring Pages

We have organized these into three sets to help you teach the themes of unity, faith, community, and the Body of Christ—from working together to living together in faith.

For Little Hands: Unity and Working Together (Pages 1–5)

Best for toddlers and preschoolers. These pages focus on cooperation, belonging, teamwork, and community.

  • Page 1: Diverse people working together with a common purpose, illustrating Genesis 11:1 and the power of unity.
  • Pages 2 & 3: Families and workers joyfully building together while the tower begins to rise toward the heavens.
  • Pages 4 & 5: Rich community scenes featuring collaboration, inclusion, and a warm mother-and-child moment during a new day of work.

Faith, Symbols, and Community (Pages 6–10)

Perfect for elementary-aged children. These pages introduce important Christian symbols and themes.

  • Page 6: Peaceful doves symbolize the Holy Spirit while people gather in devotion.
  • Pages 7 & 8: Families gather with purpose, and a symbolic lamb procession introduces themes connected to Christ’s sacrifice and redemption.
  • Pages 9 & 10: Detailed scenes show flourishing communities where creativity, nature, and cooperation work together.

The Full Story & Living as One Body (Pages 11–15)

Designed for older children and reflective learning.

  • Page 11: A richly detailed marketplace scene highlights many people contributing unique gifts and talents.
  • Pages 12 & 13: Sacred wonder and Afrofuturist-inspired imagery invite conversations about human potential, heritage, and purpose.
  • Pages 14 & 15: Corpus Christi processions and the triumphant hero scene celebrate the Body of Christ as diverse people working together in faith.

Perfect for Children’s Ministry, First Communion Prep, and Liturgical Families

These pages were designed with specific people and specific moments in mind.

  • Children’s ministry leaders preparing for Corpus Christi will find the procession and community-gathering scenes ready to use in one session. Pair a page with a read-aloud of 1 Corinthians 12:12 and let children color while the conversation unfolds — no extra prep needed.
  • First communion preparation programs will find several scenes that make the communal dimension of the Eucharist concrete: the idea that receiving at the table means joining one body of believers across every nation, language, and family.
  • Homeschool families following a liturgical calendar can anchor the feast day with a creative session. Every page carries a scripture reference, giving parents a ready-made discussion prompt without reaching for anything else.
  • Sunday school teachers and children’s liturgy leaders will find these pages built for discussion, not just quiet coloring. Every scene has a face to notice, a figure to find, and a conversation waiting to happen.
  • Parish family nights and intergenerational church events — especially those drawing children from many backgrounds — will find these pages reflect what the Body of Christ actually looks like: varied, multigenerational, and gathered around the same table.

Why We Work With Real Artists for Our Coloring Pages

Our coloring pages are created with real artists because faith-centered printables need more than neat outlines. They need thoughtfulness, reverence, warmth, and scenes that actually feel connected to the lives of children and families.

A real illustrator can make a church scene feel peaceful, a procession feel meaningful, and a family prayer moment feel natural. That is especially important for faith-based pages, where small visual choices shape how children understand what they are seeing.

At My Kid Colors, we want our printables to feel intentional: welcoming families into scenes that reflect real life, diverse communities, and the beauty of faith practiced with care.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I use these Corpus Christi coloring pages during a Feast of Corpus Christi celebration?

Create a mini procession by having children color Pages 8, 14, and 15. Display the finished artwork along a hallway or classroom path while discussing the meaning of the Body of Christ and community worship.

Which pages work best for First Communion preparation?

Pages 6, 8, 14, and 15 are excellent companions to First Communion lessons because they introduce themes related to Jesus, devotion, community, sacrifice, and belonging to the Church.

Our parish has children from many backgrounds. Will these pages feel inclusive for our group?

Every page features Black and Brown children, diverse ethnicities, intergenerational figures, and — in several scenes — children with visible differences. No child is placed in the background. These pages were drawn for the parish that actually looks like the Body of Christ.

How can I use Corpus Christi coloring pages to teach children about the Eucharist?

Use the pages as a quiet, hands-on lesson before or after Mass, Adoration, First Communion prep, or a religious education class. As children color the host, chalice, monstrance, or procession scenes, talk briefly about what each symbol means and why Catholics show reverence for the Eucharist.

What symbols should kids recognize for Corpus Christi?

The most helpful symbols are the host, chalice, monstrance, wheat, grapes, candles, flowers, and Eucharistic procession. These give children visual anchors for understanding Corpus Christi: Jesus in the Eucharist, worship, thanksgiving, and the Church gathered together in reverence and joy.

Download Your Free Corpus Christi Pages

When children learn that every person has value and purpose within God’s family, they begin to see themselves—and others—through God’s eyes.

Download the free Corpus Christi coloring pages now and give them a hands-on, faith-filled activity centered on the Eucharist, reverence, and the joy of Catholic worship.

You Might Also Like

Authors

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *