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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
New American Bible (Revised Edition) (NABRE)
Version
Psalm 78

Psalm 78[a]

A New Beginning in Zion and David

A maskil of Asaph.

I

Attend, my people, to my teaching;
    listen to the words of my mouth.
I will open my mouth in a parable,[b]
    unfold the puzzling events of the past.(A)
What we have heard and know;
    things our ancestors have recounted to us.(B)
We do not keep them from our children;
    we recount them to the next generation,
The praiseworthy deeds of the Lord and his strength,
    the wonders that he performed.(C)
God made a decree in Jacob,
    established a law in Israel:(D)
Which he commanded our ancestors,
    they were to teach their children;
That the next generation might come to know,
    children yet to be born.(E)
In turn they were to recount them to their children,
    that they too might put their confidence in God,
And not forget God’s deeds,
    but keep his commandments.
They were not to be like their ancestors,
    a rebellious and defiant generation,(F)
A generation whose heart was not constant,(G)
    and whose spirit was not faithful to God.
The ranks of Ephraimite archers,[c]
    retreated on the day of battle.
10 They did not keep God’s covenant;
    they refused to walk according to his law.
11 They forgot his deeds,
    the wonders that he had shown them.

II

A

12 In the sight of their ancestors God did wonders,
    in the land of Egypt, the plain of Zoan.[d](H)
13 He split the sea and led them across,(I)
    making the waters stand like walls.(J)
14 He led them with a cloud by day,
    all night with the light of fire.(K)
15 He split rocks in the desert,
    gave water to drink, abundant as the deeps of the sea.(L)
16 He made streams flow from crags,
    caused rivers of water to flow down.

B

17 But they went on sinning against him,
    rebelling against the Most High in the desert.(M)
18 They tested God in their hearts,
    demanding the food they craved.(N)
19 They spoke against God, and said,
    “Can God spread a table in the wilderness?(O)
20 True, when he struck the rock,
    water gushed forth,
    the wadies flooded.
But can he also give bread,
    or provide meat to his people?”

C

21 The Lord heard and grew angry;(P)
    fire blazed up against Jacob;
    anger flared up against Israel.
22 For they did not believe in God,
    did not trust in his saving power.
23 [e]So he commanded the clouds above;
    and opened the doors of heaven.
24 God rained manna upon them for food;
    grain from heaven he gave them.(Q)
25 Man ate the bread of the angels;[f]
    food he sent in abundance.
26 He stirred up the east wind in the skies;
    by his might God brought on the south wind.
27 He rained meat upon them like dust,
    winged fowl like the sands of the sea,
28 They fell down in the midst of their camp,
    all round their dwellings.
29 They ate and were well filled;
    he gave them what they had craved.
30 But while they still wanted more,
    and the food was still in their mouths,
31 God’s anger flared up against them,
    and he made a slaughter of their strongest,
    laying low the youth of Israel.(R)
32 In spite of all this they went on sinning,
    they did not believe in his wonders.

D

33 God ended their days abruptly,
    their years in sudden death.
34 When he slew them, they began to seek him;
    they again looked for God.(S)
35 They remembered[g] that God was their rock,
    God Most High, their redeemer.
36 But they deceived him with their mouths,
    lied to him with their tongues.
37 Their hearts were not constant toward him;
    they were not faithful to his covenant.(T)
38 [h]But God being compassionate forgave their sin;
    he did not utterly destroy them.
Time and again he turned back his anger,
    unwilling to unleash all his rage.(U)
39 He remembered that they were flesh,
    a breath that passes on and does not return.

III

A

40 How often they rebelled against God in the wilderness,
    grieved him in the wasteland.
41 Again and again they tested God,
    provoked the Holy One of Israel.
42 They did not remember his power,
    the day he redeemed them from the foe,(V)
43 [i]When he performed his signs in Egypt,
    his wonders in the plain of Zoan.(W)
44 God turned their rivers to blood;
    their streams they could not drink.
45 He sent swarms of insects that devoured them,(X)
    frogs that destroyed them.
46 He gave their harvest to the caterpillar,
    the fruits of their labor to the locust.
47 He killed their vines with hail,(Y)
    their sycamores with frost.
48 He exposed their cattle to plague,
    their flocks to pestilence.(Z)
49 He let loose against them the heat of his anger,
    wrath, fury, and distress,
    a band of deadly messengers.
50 He cleared a path for his anger;
    he did not spare them from death,
    but delivered their animals to the plague.
51 He struck all the firstborn of Egypt,(AA)
    the first fruits of their vigor in the tents of Ham.
52 Then God led forth his people like sheep,
    guided them like a flock through the wilderness.(AB)
53 He led them on secure and unafraid,
    while the sea enveloped their enemies.(AC)
54 And he brought them to his holy mountain,
    the hill his right hand had won.(AD)
55 He drove out the nations before them,
    allotted them as their inherited portion,
    and settled in their tents the tribes of Israel.

B

56 But they tested and rebelled against God Most High,
    his decrees they did not observe.
57 They turned disloyal, faithless like their ancestors;
    they proved false like a slack bow.
58 They enraged him with their high places,
    and with their idols provoked him[j] to jealous anger.(AE)

C

59 God heard and grew angry;
    he rejected Israel completely.
60 He forsook the shrine at Shiloh,[k](AF)
    the tent he set up among human beings.
61 He gave up his might into captivity,
    his glorious ark into the hands of the foe.(AG)
62 God delivered his people to the sword;
    he was enraged against his heritage.
63 Fire consumed their young men;
    their young women heard no wedding songs.(AH)
64 Their priests fell by the sword;
    their widows made no lamentation.

D

65 Then the Lord awoke as from sleep,
    like a warrior shouting from the effects of wine.
66 He put his foes to flight;
    everlasting shame he dealt them.
67 He rejected the tent of Joseph,
    chose not the tribe of Ephraim.
68 [l]God chose the tribe of Judah,
    Mount Zion which he loved.(AI)
69 He built his shrine like the heavens,
    like the earth which he founded forever.
70 He chose David his servant,
    took him from the sheepfolds.(AJ)
71 From tending ewes God brought him,
    to shepherd Jacob, his people,
    Israel, his heritage.(AK)
72 He shepherded them with a pure heart;
    with skilled hands he guided them.

Judges 7:1-18

Chapter 7

Defeat of Midian. Early the next morning Jerubbaal(A) (that is, Gideon) encamped by the spring of Harod with all his soldiers. The camp of Midian was north of him, beside the hill of Moreh in the valley. The Lord said to Gideon: You have too many soldiers with you for me to deliver Midian into their power, lest Israel vaunt itself against me and say, “My own power saved me.”[a](B) So announce in the hearing of the soldiers, “If anyone is afraid or fearful, let him leave!(C) Let him depart from Mount Gilead!”[b] Twenty-two thousand of the soldiers left, but ten thousand remained. The Lord said to Gideon: There are still too many soldiers. Lead them down to the water and I will test them for you there. If I tell you that a certain man is to go with you, he must go with you. But no one is to go if I tell you he must not. [c]When Gideon led the soldiers down to the water, the Lord said to him: Everyone who laps up the water as a dog does with its tongue you shall set aside by himself; and everyone who kneels down to drink raising his hand to his mouth you shall set aside by himself. Those who lapped up the water with their tongues numbered three hundred, but all the rest of the soldiers knelt down to drink the water. The Lord said to Gideon: By means of the three hundred who lapped up the water I will save you and deliver Midian into your power. So let all the other soldiers go home. They took up such supplies as the soldiers had with them, as well as their horns, and Gideon sent the rest of the Israelites to their tents, but kept the three hundred men. Now the camp of Midian was below him in the valley.

That night the Lord said to Gideon: Go, descend on the camp, for I have delivered it into your power. 10 If you are afraid to attack, go down to the camp with your aide Purah 11 and listen to what they are saying. After that you will have the courage to descend on the camp. So he went down with his aide Purah to the outposts of the armed men in the camp. 12 (D)The Midianites, Amalekites, and all the Kedemites were lying in the valley, thick as locusts. Their camels could not be counted, for they were as many as the sands on the seashore. 13 [d]When Gideon arrived, one man was telling another about a dream. “I had a dream,” he said, “that a round loaf of barley bread was rolling into the camp of Midian. It came to a certain tent and struck it and turned it upside down, and the tent collapsed.” 14 “This can only be the sword of the Israelite Gideon, son of Joash,” the other replied. “God has delivered Midian and all the camp into his power.” 15 When Gideon heard the account of the dream and its explanation, he bowed down. Then returning to the camp of Israel, he said, “Arise, for the Lord has delivered the camp of Midian into your power.”

16 He divided the three hundred men into three companies, and provided them all with horns and with empty jars and torches inside the jars. 17 “Watch me and follow my lead,” he told them. “I shall go to the edge of the camp, and as I do, you must do also. 18 When I and those with me blow horns, you too must blow horns all around the camp and cry out, ‘For the Lord and for Gideon!’”

Acts 3:1-11

Chapter 3

Cure of a Crippled Beggar. [a]Now Peter and John were going up to the temple area for the three o’clock hour of prayer.[b] (A)And a man crippled from birth was carried and placed at the gate of the temple called “the Beautiful Gate” every day to beg for alms from the people who entered the temple. When he saw Peter and John about to go into the temple, he asked for alms. But Peter looked intently at him, as did John, and said, “Look at us.” He paid attention to them, expecting to receive something from them. [c]Peter said, “I have neither silver nor gold, but what I do have I give you: in the name of Jesus Christ the Nazorean, [rise and] walk.”(B) Then Peter took him by the right hand and raised him up, and immediately his feet and ankles grew strong. He leaped up, stood, and walked around, and went into the temple with them, walking and jumping and praising God.(C) When all the people saw him walking and praising God, 10 they recognized him as the one who used to sit begging at the Beautiful Gate of the temple, and they were filled with amazement and astonishment at what had happened to him.

Peter’s Speech. 11 As he clung to Peter and John, all the people hurried in amazement toward them in the portico called “Solomon’s Portico.”(D)

John 1:19-28

II. The Book of Signs

John the Baptist’s Testimony to Himself. 19 [a]And this is the testimony of John. When the Jews[b] from Jerusalem sent priests and Levites [to him] to ask him, “Who are you?” 20 [c]he admitted and did not deny it, but admitted,(A) “I am not the Messiah.” 21 So they asked him, “What are you then? Are you Elijah?”[d] And he said, “I am not.” “Are you the Prophet?” He answered, “No.”(B) 22 So they said to him, “Who are you, so we can give an answer to those who sent us? What do you have to say for yourself?” 23 He said:

“I am ‘the voice of one crying out in the desert,(C)
“Make straight the way of the Lord,”’[e]

as Isaiah the prophet said.” 24 Some Pharisees[f] were also sent. 25 They asked him, “Why then do you baptize if you are not the Messiah or Elijah or the Prophet?”(D) 26 John answered them, “I baptize with water;[g] but there is one among you whom you do not recognize,(E) 27 the one who is coming after me, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to untie.” 28 This happened in Bethany across the Jordan,[h] where John was baptizing.

New American Bible (Revised Edition) (NABRE)

Scripture texts, prefaces, introductions, footnotes and cross references used in this work are taken from the New American Bible, revised edition © 2010, 1991, 1986, 1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Inc., Washington, DC All Rights Reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.