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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
Contemporary English Version (CEV)
Version
Psalm 20-21

(A psalm by David for the music leader.)

A Prayer for Victory

I pray that the Lord
will listen when you
    are in trouble,
and that the God of Jacob
    will keep you safe.
May the Lord send help
    from his temple
and come to your rescue
    from Mount Zion.
May he remember your gifts
and be pleased
    with what you bring.

May God do what you want most
    and let all go well for you.
Then you will win victories,
    and we will celebrate,
while raising our banners
    in the name of our God.
May the Lord answer
    all your prayers!

I am certain, Lord,
that you will help
    your chosen king.
You will answer my prayers
from your holy place
    in heaven,
and you will save me
    with your mighty arm.

Some people trust the power
of chariots or horses,
    but we trust you, Lord God.
Others will stumble and fall,
but we will be strong
    and stand firm.

Give the king victory, Lord,
    and answer our prayers.[a]

(A psalm by David for the music leader.)

Thanking the Lord for Victory

Our Lord, your mighty power
    makes the king glad,
and he celebrates victories
    that you have given him.
You did what he wanted most
    and never told him “No.”
You truly blessed the king,
and you placed on him
    a crown of finest gold.
He asked to live a long time,
and you promised him life
    that never ends.

The king is highly honored.
You have let him win victories
    that have made him famous.
You have given him blessings
    that will last forever,
and you have made him glad
    by being so near to him.
Lord Most High,
    the king trusts you,
and your kindness
    keeps him from defeat.

With your mighty arm, Lord,
you will strike down all
    of your hateful enemies.
They will be destroyed by fire
    once you are here,
and because of your anger,
    flames will swallow them.
10 You will wipe their families
from the earth,
    and they will disappear.
11 All their plans to harm you
    will come to nothing.
12 You will make them run away
by shooting your arrows
    at their faces.

13 Show your strength, Lord,
so that we may sing
    and praise your power.

Psalm 110

(A psalm by David.)

The Lord Gives Victory

(A) The Lord said to my Lord,
    “Sit at my right side,[a]
until I make your enemies
    into a footstool for you.”

The Lord will let your power
    reach out from Zion,
and you will rule
    over your enemies.
Your glorious power
will be seen on the day
    you begin to rule.
You will wear the sacred robes
and shine like the morning sun
    in all of your strength.[b]
(B) The Lord has made a promise
    that will never be broken:
“You will be a priest forever,
    just like Melchizedek.”

The Lord is at your right side,
    and when he gets angry
he will crush
    the other kings.
He will judge the nations
    and crack their skulls,
leaving piles of dead bodies
    all over the earth.
He will drink from any stream
that he chooses, while winning
    victory after victory.[c]

Psalm 116-117

When the Lord Saves You from Death

I love you, Lord!
    You answered my prayers.
You paid attention to me,
and so I will pray to you
    as long as I live.
Death attacked from all sides,
and I was captured
    by its painful chains.
But when I was really hurting,
I prayed and said, “Lord,
    please don't let me die!”

You are kind, Lord,
    so good and merciful.
You protect ordinary people,
and when I was helpless,
    you saved me
and treated me so kindly
that I don't need
    to worry anymore.

You, Lord, have saved
    my life from death,
    my eyes from tears,
    my feet from stumbling.
Now I will walk at your side
    in this land of the living.
10 (A) I was faithful to you
    when I was suffering,
11 though in my confusion I said,
    “I can't trust anyone!”

12 What must I give you, Lord,
    for being so good to me?
13 I will pour out an offering
    of wine to you,
and I will pray in your name
because you
    have saved me.
14 I will keep my promise to you
    when your people meet.
15 You are deeply concerned
when one of your loyal people
    faces death.

16 I worship you, Lord,
    just as my mother did,
and you have rescued me
    from the chains of death.
17 I will offer you a sacrifice
to show how grateful I am,
    and I will pray.
18 I will keep my promise to you
    when your people
19 gather at your temple
in Jerusalem.
    Shout praises to the Lord!

Come Praise the Lord

(B) All of you nations,
come praise the Lord!
    Let everyone praise him.
God's love for us is wonderful;
his faithfulness never ends.
    Shout praises to the Lord!

Genesis 6:9-22

(A) and this is the story about him. Noah was the only person who lived right and obeyed God. 10 He had three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

11-12 God knew that everyone was terribly cruel and violent. 13 So he told Noah:

Cruelty and violence have spread everywhere. Now I'm going to destroy the whole earth and all its people. 14 Get some good lumber and build a boat. Put rooms in it and cover it with tar inside and out. 15 Make it 133 meters long, 22 meters wide, and 13 meters high. 16 Build a roof[a] on the boat and leave a space of about 44 centimeters between the roof and the sides.[b] Make the boat three stories high and put a door on one side.

17 I'm going to send a flood that will destroy everything that breathes! Nothing will be left alive. 18 But I solemnly promise that you, your wife, your sons, and your daughters-in-law will be kept safe in the boat.[c]

19-20 Take into the boat with you a male and a female of every kind of animal and bird, as well as a male and a female of every reptile. I don't want them to be destroyed. 21 Store up enough food both for yourself and for them.

22 (B) Noah did everything God told him to do.

Hebrews 4:1-13

The promise to enter the place of rest is still good, and we must take care that none of you miss out. We have heard the message, just as they did. But they failed to believe what they heard, and the message did not do them any good. (A) Only people who have faith will enter the place of rest. It is just as the Scriptures say,

“God became angry
    and told the people,
‘You will never enter
    my place of rest!’ ”

God said this, even though everything has been ready from the time of creation. (B) In fact, somewhere the Scriptures say that by the seventh day, God had finished his work, and so he rested. (C) We also read that he later said, “You people will never enter my place of rest!” This means that the promise to enter is still good, because those who first heard about it disobeyed and did not enter. (D) Much later God told David to make the promise again, just as I have already said,

“If you hear his voice today,
    don't be stubborn!”

(E) If Joshua had really given the people rest, there would not be any need for God to talk about another day of rest. But God has promised us a Sabbath when we will rest, even though it has not yet come. 10 (F) On that day God's people will rest from their work, just as God rested from his work.

11 We should do our best to enter the place of rest, so none of us will disobey and miss going there, as they did. 12 God's word is alive and powerful! It is sharper than any double-edged sword. His word can cut through our spirits and souls and through our joints and marrow, until it discovers the desires and thoughts of our hearts. 13 (G) Nothing is hidden from God! He sees through everything, and we will have to tell him the truth.

John 2:13-22

Jesus in the Temple

(Matthew 21.12,13; Mark 11.15-17; Luke 19.45,46)

13 (A) Not long before the Jewish festival of Passover, Jesus went to Jerusalem. 14 There he found people selling cattle, sheep, and doves in the temple. He also saw moneychangers sitting at their tables. 15 So he took some rope and made a whip. Then he chased everyone out of the temple, together with their sheep and cattle. He turned over the tables of the moneychangers and scattered their coins.

16 Jesus said to the people who had been selling doves, “Get those doves out of here! Don't make my Father's house a marketplace.”

17 (B) The disciples then remembered that the Scriptures say, “My love for your house burns in me like a fire.”

18 The Jewish leaders asked Jesus, “What miracle[a] will you work to show us why you have done this?”

19 (C) “Destroy this temple,” Jesus answered, “and in three days I will build it again!”

20 The leaders replied, “It took 46 years to build this temple. What makes you think you can rebuild it in three days?”

21 But Jesus was talking about his body as a temple. 22 And when he was raised from death, his disciples remembered what he had told them. Then they believed the Scriptures and the words of Jesus.

Contemporary English Version (CEV)

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