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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
The Voice (VOICE)
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Psalm 105

Psalm 105

Come, offer thanks to the Eternal; invoke His holy name.
    Tell other people about the things He has done.
Sing songs of praise to Him;
    tell stories of all His miracles.
Revel in His holy name.
    May the hearts of the people who seek the Eternal celebrate and experience great joy.
Seek the Eternal and His power;
    look to His face constantly.
Remember the wonderful things He has done,
    His miracles and the wise decisions He has made,
O children of Abraham, His servant;
    O children of Jacob, His chosen people!

He is the Eternal, our True God;
    His justice extends to every corner of the earth.
He keeps His covenant promises forever
    and remembers the word He spoke to a thousand generations—
The covenant He made with Abraham
    and His sworn oath to Isaac, his son.
10 Then God confirmed it to Jacob—decreed it so—
    to Israel He promised a never-ending covenant,
11 Saying, “I will give you the land of Canaan
    as your part; it will be your inheritance.”

12 When God’s people were only a few in number—
    indeed, very few—they were strangers in a foreign land.
13 They roamed from place to place,
    from one kingdom to another.
14 God didn’t allow anyone to tyrannize them;
    He rebuked kings in order to protect His people:
15 “Do not lay a hand on My anointed people;
    do not do any harm to My prophets.”

16 He ordered famine to grip the land and
    cut them off from their supply of bread.
17 But long before, He had sent a man ahead of them:
    Joseph, who had been sold into slavery.[a]
18 At first, his masters shackled his feet with chains,
    placed his neck into a collar of iron.
19 That was until the Eternal’s promises came to pass;
    His word tested Joseph and proved him worthy.
20 The king sent out the order to release him from prison;
    the ruler of Egypt liberated him from the chains.
21 Then he put Joseph in charge of the royal household,
    made him ruler of all the royal possessions,
22 Allowed him to imprison the royal officials whenever he saw fit
    and impart wisdom to the elders in the land.

23 Then, when the time was right, Israel also went to Egypt;
    Jacob resided as an alien in the land of Ham.
24 And while they were there, the Eternal made His people prosperous;
    He made them stronger than their enemies.
25 He turned the Egyptians’ hearts against His people[b]
    to cheat and scheme against His servants.

26 Then, He sent His servant Moses
    and Aaron, the men He had chosen.
27 They did all the signs He planned for them to do among the Egyptians,
    and they performed miracles in the land of Ham.
28 He sent darkness to cover the land;
    they did not stray from His word.
29 At His command, their waters turned to blood;
    their fish began to die.
30 Throngs of frogs covered the land,
    invading even in the chambers of their kings.
31 At His command, a swarm of flies arrived,
    and gnats came over all their land.
32 He caused hail to fall instead of rain;
    lightning flashed over all their land.
33 He struck their vines and their fig trees;
    He destroyed the trees over all their land.
34 At His command, locusts came;
    young locusts marched beyond number,
35 And they ate up all the plants that grew
    and all the fruits over their land.
36 He also brought death to the firstborn in all their land,
    the first offspring of each man.

37 Then He brought His people out of slavery, weighed down with silver and gold;
    and of all His tribes,
    not one of them stumbled, not one was left behind.
38 Egypt was glad to see them go,
    for Pharaoh’s people had been overcome with fear of them.
39 He spread out a cloud to cover His people
    and sent a fire to light their way at night.
40 They asked, and He sent them coveys of quail,
    satisfying their hunger with the food of heaven.
41 He split the rock and water poured out;
    it flowed like a river through the desert.
42 For He remembered His holy covenant
    with Abraham, His servant.

43 That’s why He rescued His people joyously
    and why His chosen ones celebrated with shouts and singing.
44 When the time was right, He gave them land from other nations
    so that they might possess the works of their hands,
45 So that they would be able to keep His commands
    and obey His laws.
Praise the Eternal!

Numbers 17:1-11

17 The Eternal One continued.

Eternal One (to Moses): 2-3 Tell the Israelites that you’ll need twelve staffs—one for each of the extended families. Engrave on each one the respective leader’s name. (Aaron’s name should be on the Levi family’s staff.) Bring the staff of each of them into the congregation tent and lay them in front of My tablets of witness with you in the place where I meet you. I will indicate the person whom I choose by making his particular staff grow shoots and leaves. This will end once and for all any complaints about your leadership.

6-7 Moses passed these instructions on to the Israelites, and they all agreed to do it. They each gave their staffs as leaders representing their extended families with Aaron’s staff among them. Then Moses placed them before the Eternal One in the tent of the congregation and before the covenant. The next day, when Moses went into the tent where the covenant was kept, it was obvious that Aaron of the Levite family was God’s choice. Aaron’s staff had grown not only little buds, but it had actually flowered and developed fully-ripened almonds. Moses carried the staffs out of the Eternal’s presence, showed them to the congregation, and redistributed them to the twelve leaders.

Eternal One (to Moses): 10 Return Aaron’s staff to the tent and place it in front of the covenant, to serve as a reminder of whom I’ve chosen to lead this people. Let it be a warning to any who would question or undermine your leadership. I have made My choice clear and will kill anyone who persists in challenging it.

11 So Moses returned Aaron’s staff to the tent just as the Eternal told him to do.

Romans 5:1-11

In God’s plan to restore a fallen and disfigured world, Abraham became the father of all of us, the agent of blessing to everyone. Jesus completes what God started centuries before when He established Abraham’s covenant family. Those who put faith in Jesus and call Him “Lord” become part of Abraham’s faith family. Because God is gracious, loving, and merciful, men and women from every corner of the earth are not only declared right, but ultimately are made right as well. It happens through God’s actions—not our efforts—in the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus who was crucified for our misdeeds and raised to repair what has been wrong all along. So the promises of God made long years ago are being realized in men and women who hear the call of faith and answer “yes” to it.

Since we have been acquitted and made right through faith, we are able to experience true and lasting peace with God through our Lord Jesus, the Anointed One, the Liberating King. Jesus leads us into a place of radical grace where we are able to celebrate the hope of experiencing God’s glory. And that’s not all. We also celebrate in seasons of suffering because we know that when we suffer we develop endurance, which shapes our characters. When our characters are refined, we learn what it means to hope and anticipate God’s goodness. And hope will never fail to satisfy our deepest need because the Holy Spirit that was given to us has flooded our hearts with God’s love.

When the time was right, the Anointed One died for all of us who were far from God, powerless, and weak. Now it is rare to find someone willing to die for an upright person, although it’s possible that someone may give up his life for one who is truly good. But think about this: while we were wasting our lives in sin, God revealed His powerful love to us in a tangible display—the Anointed One died for us. As a result, the blood of Jesus has made us right with God now, and certainly we will be rescued by Him from God’s wrath in the future. 10 If we were in the heat of combat with God when His Son reconciled us by laying down His life, then how much more will we be saved by Jesus’ resurrection life? 11 In fact, we stand now reconciled and at peace with God. That’s why we celebrate in God through our Lord Jesus, the Anointed.

Matthew 20:17-28

God’s glory and kingdom are His, so He is free to lavish goodness on anyone He pleases. If someone feels jealous because her friend’s husband seems nicer than her husband, or because another’s brother works no harder than he does but somehow earns far more money, or because another’s classmate who has the intelligence of a sponge always seems to get better grades, then God’s generosity will indeed undo all we have come to know and expect.

17 As Jesus was making His way to Jerusalem, He took His twelve disciples aside and once again told them what was about to happen.

Jesus: 18 We are going to Jerusalem. The Son of Man will be betrayed to the chief priests and to the teachers of the law. He will be condemned to death, 19 and the priests and teachers will turn Him over to the Romans, who will mock Him and flog Him and crucify Him. But on the third day, He will be raised from the dead to new resurrected life.

20 As Jesus was speaking about the things that were to come, Zebedee’s wife, whose sons were among Jesus’ disciples, came to Jesus with her sons and knelt down before Him to ask a favor.

Jesus: 21 What do you want?

Zebedee’s Wife: When the kingdom of God is made manifest, I want one of my boys, James and John, to sit at Your right hand, and one to sit at Your left hand.

Apparently the wife of Zebedee secretly thinks her sons have worked harder and sacrificed more for Jesus than the other disciples, and she probably suspects that Jesus loves them best. She thinks He will at least do the right thing and reward their hardest work and most loyal service. She also hopes that if her sons are there on the nearest, closest thrones, she may spend eternity near and close, too, clutching onto their coattails.

Jesus (to all three): 22 You don’t understand what you are asking. Can you drink the cup I am going to drink? Can you be ritually washed in baptism just as I have been baptized?[a]

Zebedee Brothers: Of course!

Jesus: 23 Yes, you will drink from My cup, and yes, you will be baptized[b] as I have been. But the thrones to My right and My left are not Mine to grant. My Father has already given those seats to those for whom they were created.

24 The other ten disciples learned what the Zebedee brothers had asked of Jesus, and they were upset. 25 So Jesus called the disciples together.

Jesus: Do you want the Kingdom run like the Romans run their kingdom? Their rulers have great power over the people, but God the Father doesn’t play by the Romans’ rules. 26 This is the Kingdom’s logic: whoever wants to become great must first make himself a servant; 27 whoever wants to be first must bind himself as a slave— 28 just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and to give His life as the ransom for many.

The Voice (VOICE)

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.