Overview
The Human Easter Hunt is a fast paced outreach that motivates students to invite their friends. Instead of searching for Easter eggs, teams search for people who match categories on a point sheet. Students text friends, meet up with them, and bring them back to the event location to earn points. The more friends they bring who match the categories, the more points their team earns.
When everyone returns, the group gathers for snacks, a fun game, a student testimony, and a short Easter message that explains the gospel. Because the activity naturally involves inviting friends, it often results in many students attending who have never come before.
This outreach should take place outside school hours.
Leader Prep Checklist
- Choose the event location, house, church, or meeting space
- Create the point sheet
- Prepare snacks and drinks
- Recruit adult drivers if needed
- Prepare a student testimony
- Prepare a short Easter message with gospel message
- Print comment cards and bring pens
- Choose a prize for the winning team
Outreach Tips
- Empower student leaders to help design the categories and lead teams.
- Encourage students to text friends ahead of time and arrange meet ups so people can easily join the hunt.
- Make safety a priority by encouraging adult drivers and minimizing unnecessary driving.
- Remind teams that the goal is not just earning points but bringing as many friends as possible back to the meeting.
- Offer a fun prize like gift cards, snacks, or a small trophy for the winning team.
- Make sure the meeting time is clearly communicated so everyone knows when to return.
- Keep the meeting portion short and engaging so guests feel comfortable staying.
Students are far more likely to invite their friends to something interactive and fun than to a traditional meeting.
Sample Outreach Schedule
- 6:45 pm -Gather students, explain the rules, and divide into teams.
- 7:00 pm – Human Easter Hunt begins.
- 8:15 pm – Teams return to the meeting location and turn in their score sheets, then hang out, eat snacks, and talk with their friends as the scores are counted and people arrive. You may also want to have a fun game everyone can play while they wait.
- 8:25 pm – Fun upfront game to get everyone laughing and engaged.
- 8:30 pm – Student testimony.
- 8:35 pm – Short Easter message and gospel explanation.
- 8:45 pm – Comment cards and refreshments.
Example Point Sheet Categories
Example categories might include:
- A varsity athlete
- Someone wearing Crocs
- A student with dyed hair
- Someone in drama club
- Someone who can do a TikTok dance’
- Someone taller than six feet
- A pair of twins
You can create your own list based on your school culture.
Activity or Game Explanation
As teams begin returning, have a clear plan for what happens next so guests feel comfortable and engaged. First, collect the score sheets and begin tallying points. While leaders count the scores, allow students to grab snacks and hang out with the friends they brought. This is also a great time to play music and allow students to mingle. Some groups choose to have a simple Easter themed activity available, such as a quick Easter egg hunt around the room or campus area.
After most teams have returned, gather everyone together and start a fun upfront game that everyone can watch or participate in. This helps guests relax and creates a fun atmosphere before the testimony and message.
Once the game ends, briefly celebrate the winning team and transition into the testimony and Easter message.
Upfront Game
Start a fun game that everyone can watch or participate in. The goal is to help guests relax and laugh.
Possible Games
Egg Toss
Pairs toss a plastic egg and step farther apart each round.
Marshmallow Toss
Partners try to catch marshmallows in a cup.
Egg Stack Challenge
Students race to stack plastic eggs.
After the game, briefly announce the Human Easter Hunt winning team.
Because the activity naturally involves inviting friends, it often results in many students showing up who have never attended before.
Short Talk and Gospel Transition
After the teams return, gather everyone together and celebrate the teams that brought the most people. Then transition into a short Easter message. You might say something like:
“Tonight you spent the evening searching for people who matched the list on your sheet. In a way, Easter is about searching too. People spend their lives searching for meaning, purpose, and hope.”
“Sometimes when people do Easter egg hunts there is a golden egg hidden somewhere. It is the one everyone hopes to find because it contains the best prize.”
“In life we search for many things, but Easter points us to the one place meaning and hope are truly found. The message of Easter is that Jesus died for our sins and rose again so we could have a relationship with God.”
Briefly explain the gospel and invite students to begin a relationship with Jesus or talk with a leader afterward.
Comment Cards
Comment cards help identify students who want to learn more about Jesus or stay connected with your group. Ask everyone to take a minute to fill one out before the meeting ends.
After the Event
- Follow up with students within 24 to 48 hours. A simple text thanking them for coming is a great start.
- Invite interested students to a Bible study or your next gathering.
- Invite any student who indicated a decision for Christ to a follow-up meeting to help them take their next steps with Christ
- Make sure someone connects personally with students who indicated spiritual interest on their comment cards.