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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
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Psalm 83

This psalm is a song that Asaph wrote.

Israel's enemies

83 God, do not continue to be silent!
    Do not remain quiet.
Please do something!
Look! Your enemies are causing trouble.
    The people who hate you are ready to attack.
They decide carefully how they will attack your people.
    They want to hurt the people that you love.
They say, ‘Come now! We will destroy them.
    They will no longer be a nation.
Nobody will remember the name of Israel any more.’
They agree together what they will do.
    They join one another to fight against you.
Those enemies are Edomites and Ishmaelites,
    Moabites and Hagrites.
They also come from Gebal, Ammon and Amalek,
    Philistia and Tyre.
Even the Assyrian army has joined with them.
They have given strength to Lot's descendants,
    the Moabites and the Ammonites.
Selah.
God, punish them as you punished Midian.
    Do what you did to Sisera and Jabin at the River Kishon.[a]
10 You destroyed them at Endor.
    Their bodies remained on the ground, like dirt.
11 Do to their leaders
    what you did to Oreb and Zeeb.
Let their rulers die,
    like Zebah and Zalmunna.[b]
12 Those people said,
    ‘Let us take God's valuable country for ourselves!’
13 God, blow them away like dust,
    like chaff that blows away in the wind!
14 Go after them,
    like a fire that burns both forest and mountains.
15 Chase them away with your storms.
    Frighten them with your strong winds.
16 Cause them to be very ashamed, Lord,
    so that they might turn to you.
17 May they always be ashamed and frightened.
    Let them die with shame![c]
18 Then they will understand that you are the Lord.
They will know that you are the Most High God
    who rules over all the earth.

Psalm 145

This is a song that David wrote to praise God.

An alphabet of praise[a]

145 Always I will praise you, my God and my king,
    and I will say how great you are!
Because you are good, I will praise you every day.
    Yes, I will always praise your name.
Clearly the Lord is great!
    He is so great that we cannot understand it.
Down from father to son, people will praise you.
    They will tell each other about the powerful things that you have done.
Everyone will speak about your glory and authority.
    I also will think carefully about your great miracles.
Famous are the powerful things that you have done.
    People will talk about them.
    I also will speak about the great things that you do.
Good things are what everybody will remember about you.
    They will sing about your justice.
How very kind the Lord is!
    He is very patient and his faithful love continues.
It is the Lord who takes care of everybody.
    He is kind to everything that he has made.
10 Join together to thank the Lord!
    Everything that he has made will praise him.
    Your own people will praise you, Lord!
11 King is who you are and your kingdom is great!
    People will speak about your royal authority.
12 Let everyone agree that you do great things!
    Let them say that you rule with great authority.
13 Many years your kingdom will remain, even for ever.
    You will always rule your people and their descendants.
Nothing that the Lord promises is false.
    He is kind in everything that he does.[b]
14 Often people fall, but the Lord lifts them up.
    He helps everyone who has trouble.
15 People look to you for help.
    You give them food when they need it.
16 Ready to help, you open your hand.
    You give to every living thing the good things that they want.
17 So the Lord is fair in all that he does.
    He always shows how much he loves us.
18 The Lord is ready to help everyone who asks him.
    He is near to everyone who prays honestly.
19 Very kindly he gives his own people the things that they need.
    He saves them when they call to him for help.
20 Whoever loves the Lord, he keeps safe.
    But he destroys wicked people.
21 Yes, I will praise the Lord!
Everyone who lives should praise his holy name for ever!

Psalm 85-86

The sons of Korah wrote this psalm for the music leader.

A prayer for peace[a]

85 Lord, you have blessed your land.
You have made Jacob's descendants strong again.[b]
You forgave your people's sins.
    You took away their guilt.
Selah
You stopped being so angry with them.
    You did not punish them any more.
But now turn back to us,
    and make us strong again, God.
You are the one who rescues us.
    Please stop being angry with us.
Will you continue to be angry with us for ever?
    Will you be angry with our children too?
Please turn back to us
    and give us new life!
Then your people will be happy
    and they will praise you.
Lord, show us again your faithful love!
    Please rescue us!

Now I will listen to what the Lord God says.
He will give peace to his people,
    to those who serve him.
But they must not turn back
    to do foolish things again.
Yes, God will soon rescue his people who serve him.
Then we will see his glory again in our land.
10 God will be faithful to us
    and he will love us with his faithful love.
His justice and his peace will join together,
    like dear friends.
11 Faithful truth will grow like a plant in the ground.
    Justice will look down from the sky above.[c]
12 Yes! The Lord will bless us with many good things.
    Plenty of food will grow in our land.
13 Justice will go before our God,
    and it will make a way for him to walk on.

David's prayer.

A prayer for help

86 Lord, please listen to me,
    and answer me!
I am weak and I need help.
I am your faithful servant,
    so keep my life safe!
Please save me, my God,
    for I trust in you.
My Lord, be kind to me.
All through the day,
    I am calling to you for help.
Please make me happy deep inside,
    for you are the one that I pray to, my Lord.
Yes, my Lord, you are very kind,
    and you are ready to forgive people.
When anyone calls to you for help,
    you love them with your faithful love.
Lord, hear my prayer!
    Please listen when I call to you for help.
Whenever trouble comes to me,
    I will pray to you.
I know that you will answer me.
There is no one like you, my Lord,
    among all the gods.
Nobody can do the great things that you do.
You have made all the nations of the world,
    and they will all come to worship you, my Lord.
They will agree that your name is great.
10 For you are great and you do great things.
    You alone are God.
11 Lord, teach me how I should live.
    Then I will obey your truth.
Teach me to serve you with all that I am,
    so that I respect you with fear.
12 My Lord and my God,
    I will thank you with all my strength.
I will praise your name for ever!
13 I know that you love me very much
    with your faithful love.
You will continue to keep my life safe,
    so that I do not go down into the deep hole of death.
14 God, proud people are attacking me.
Cruel men have joined together to kill me.
    They do not respect you at all.
15 But you, my Lord, are a kind God
    who forgives people.
You do not quickly become angry,
    and your faithful love is very great.
We can always trust you
    to do what you have promised.
16 Turn to me and be kind to me.
    I am your servant, so make me strong.
Please rescue your slave!
17 Help me, so that I know you are pleased with me.
Then my enemies will see it,
    and they will be ashamed.
They will know that you, Lord,
    have helped me and comforted me.

2 Samuel 11

David and Bathsheba

11 In the spring, David sent out his army to attack the Ammonites. That was the time of year when kings go out to fight battles.[a] Joab led the whole Israelite army, together with his officers. They attacked the Ammonites, and they won the fight against them. Israel's army made their camp all around Rabbah city. But David had stayed in Jerusalem.

One evening, David got up from his bed. He walked around on the roof of his palace.[b] From the roof he saw a woman who was washing herself. She was very beautiful. David sent a servant to ask who she was. The servant told him, ‘She is Eliam's daughter, Bathsheba. She is the wife of Uriah the Hittite.’

Then David sent some servants to bring Bathsheba to him. She came to him and he slept with her. (She had just made herself clean from her monthly blood loss.) Then she returned to her home. Later, Bathsheba realized that she was pregnant. She sent a message to tell David about it.

So David sent a message to Joab. He said, ‘Send Uriah the Hittite to me.’ So Joab sent Uriah to David. When Uriah arrived, David asked him about Joab and the Israelite army. He asked Uriah about the war. Then David said to Uriah, ‘Now go to your house and rest for a time.’ So Uriah left the palace. Then King David sent a gift to him at home. But Uriah slept at the door of the palace, together with his master's servants. He did not go to his house.

10 David's servants told him, ‘Uriah did not go to his house last night.’ So David said to Uriah, ‘You have just arrived after a long journey. Why did you not go to your house?’

11 Uriah said to David, ‘The armies of Israel and Judah are all living in tents, as well as the Covenant Box. My master Joab and the soldiers of your army are sleeping in the fields. So I cannot go to my house and eat a meal there. It would not be right for me to go home and sleep with my wife. As surely as you live, I promise that I would never do that!’

12 David said to Uriah, ‘Stay here one more day. Tomorrow I will send you back to the war.’ So Uriah stayed in Jerusalem that day and the next day. 13 David asked him to come and eat a meal with him. David caused Uriah to drink a lot of wine so that he became drunk. But in the evening Uriah still did not go to his own house. He slept on his mat, where his master's servants all slept.

14 In the morning, David wrote a letter to Joab. Uriah took the letter to Joab. 15 In the letter, David told Joab, ‘Put Uriah at the front of all our soldiers, where the battle is most dangerous. Then tell the other soldiers to move back away from him. Then he will be alone and the enemy's soldiers will kill him.’

16 Joab's soldiers were all around Rabbah city and they were watching it carefully. Joab sent Uriah to fight near to the city, where the enemy's best soldiers were. 17 When some of the Ammonite soldiers came out of the city to fight Joab's army, they killed some of David's men. Uriah the Hittite was one of the men who died there.

Joab tells David that Uriah is dead

18 Joab wrote a report to tell David about the battle. 19 He told the man who was taking the message, ‘When you finish giving my report to the king, 20 the king may be angry. He may ask you, “Why did you go and fight so near to the city? Surely you knew that they would shoot arrows from the walls. 21 Remember how a woman killed Jerub-Besheth's son, Abimelech. She threw a heavy stone down on him from the city wall in Thebez. You should not have gone so near to Rabbah's city wall.” If King David does say that, tell him, “Your servant, Uriah the Hittite is dead too.” ’

22 The man that Joab sent to David with his message arrived. He told David all the news that Joab had sent with him. 23 The man said to David, ‘The enemy's men were stronger than us and they attacked us in the fields. But we chased them back as far as the gate of their city. 24 Then enemy soldiers shot arrows from the city wall and some of your men died. Your servant, Uriah the Hittite, is also dead.’

25 David said to the man that Joab had sent, ‘Tell Joab, “Do not be too upset. The enemy will always kill some of our men, and it could be anyone. Continue to attack the city even more strongly and then you will take it for us.” If you say that to Joab, he will not be so sad.’

26 Uriah's wife heard the news that her husband was dead. She was very sad and she wept because of his death. 27 The time for Uriah's wife to weep for her husband came to an end. Then David sent some of his men to bring her to his palace. She became David's wife. Later, she gave birth to a son. But the Lord was not pleased with David because of the bad things that David had done.

Acts 19:11-20

The sons of Sceva tell bad spirits to leave people

11 God was helping Paul to do special miracles. 12 Because of this, people were taking pieces of cloth and clothes that Paul gave to them. Paul had used these things, and people took them to those who were ill. After they touched these cloths, the sick people would become well again. Bad spirits also left them.

13 There were some Jewish men who travelled about to different places. They caused bad spirits to leave people. Some of them wanted to use the name of the Lord Jesus when they did this. These Jews said to the bad spirits, ‘We tell you to come out of these people. We say this with the authority of Jesus, the man that Paul teaches people about.’

14 Sceva was a leader of the Jewish priests in that place. He had seven sons who were telling bad spirits to come out of people. They used the name of Jesus when they did this. 15 But one day the bad spirit in a man said to them, ‘I know who Jesus is. I also know about Paul. But I do not know who you are.’ 16 The man who had the bad spirit in him then jumped up. He fought with the seven sons and he was too strong for them. He hurt them badly and he tore their clothes off. So the sons ran away from the man's house. Their bodies were bleeding and they wore no clothes.

17 All the Jews and Gentiles who lived in Ephesus heard about this. They became very afraid. Now they respected the name of the Lord Jesus very much. They knew that he was very powerful. 18 Many of the believers agreed that they had done wicked things. They told other believers about this. 19 Some of them had used magic to do powerful things. These people brought all their special books and they burned them in a fire. Everybody saw what they did. The books had cost a lot of money. The value of all the books was 50,000 silver coins. 20 As a result of this, more and more people heard the good news about the Lord Jesus. The message was powerful and people's lives changed.

Mark 9:2-13

Six days after that, Jesus asked Peter, James and John to go with him. Jesus led them up a high mountain, where they were alone together. Peter, James and John saw Jesus change in front of them. His clothes became very white; they were shining. They were a brighter white than anyone on earth could wash them. Then Elijah and Moses appeared in front of the three disciples. Elijah and Moses were talking with Jesus.[a][b]

So Peter said to Jesus, ‘Teacher, it is good that we are here. Please let us build three huts. One hut will be for you. One hut will be for Moses. And one hut will be for Elijah.’ Peter did not really know what to say. That was because the three disciples were very afraid.[c]

Then a cloud appeared and it covered them all. A voice spoke from the cloud and it said, ‘This is my Son, and I love him. Listen to him.’

At that moment, the three disciples looked around. They saw that nobody else was there now. Only Jesus was there with them.

While they were walking down the mountain, Jesus said to the three disciples, ‘You must not tell anyone now about the things that you have just seen. One day the Son of Man will become alive again after his death. Then you can tell people about these things.’ 10 The three disciples kept these words secret. But they talked together about the words, ‘become alive again after his death’. They asked each other, ‘What does this mean?’

11 Then the three disciples asked Jesus, ‘Why do the teachers of God's Law say that God's prophet Elijah must return first, before the Messiah comes?’

12 Jesus said to them, ‘Elijah does come first. He makes everything ready. But what is written in the Bible about the Son of Man? It says that people will cause him to suffer a lot. They will think that he is nothing.[d] 13 But I tell you that Elijah has already come.[e] People did to him everything that they wanted to do. The Bible already showed that those things would happen to him.’

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