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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 5-6

Tell the music leader to use flutes.

This is a song that David wrote.

Pray about your enemies[a]

Lord, listen to what I say to you.
    I am upset, so think about what I am saying.
My King and my God, listen to my voice.
    I am asking you to help me.
    I am praying to you!
Lord, every morning you listen to my voice.
At sunrise I will turn to you for help,
    and I will wait for you to answer.[b]
My God, you do not like anything that is bad.
    Evil people cannot live near you.
    Proud people cannot stand in front of you.
God, you hate everyone who does evil things.
    You destroy those who tell lies.
The Lord hates murderers,
    and those who deceive others.[c]
But I will come into your house,
    because of your faithful love.
I will bend low in your holy temple,
    and I will worship you.
Lord, help me to follow your right way.
My enemies are waiting to attack me.
    Show the right way clearly to me,
    so that I do not go the wrong way.
My enemies never speak what is true.
    They only want to destroy people.
Their mouth has the smell of an open grave.[d]
Their tongues say nice things,
    but they are all lies!
10 God, say that they are guilty!
    Let their own wicked ideas bring punishment to them.
Send them away because they do so many bad things.
    Yes, they have turned against you.
11 Please make people who turn to you happy.
Make them always sing with joy,
    because you keep them safe.
Take care of those who are faithful to you.
    Then they will be really happy.
12 Lord, you bless those who live in a right way.
Your love is like a shield that keeps them safe.

This is a song that David wrote.

Tell the music leader, ‘Use harps when you sing this song.’

David prays for health[e]

Lord, when you are angry,
    please do not punish me.
I do not feel strong, Lord,
    so please be kind to me.
Lord, please make me well again.
    Even my bones are shaking.
    I am very frightened.
Lord, when will you do something to help me?[f]
Lord, turn back to me. Give me back my life.
    Make me safe because of your faithful love.
If I die, I will no longer remember you.
    Nobody can praise you in their grave!
I am crying so much that I have no more strength.
    My bed becomes wet because I weep all night.
    My tears run into my pillow.[g]
I am so sad that my eyes do not see well any more.
    They are becoming weak because of all my enemies.[h]

Go away from me, you people who do wicked things!
    Now the Lord has heard me when I weep.[i]
I asked the Lord to be kind and to help me.
    Now he has answered me!
10 All my enemies will become ashamed!
    They will go away from me in fear!
    Shame will suddenly come to them!

Psalm 10-11

A prayer for help[a]

10 Must you stand so far away, Lord?
    Why do you hide when there is trouble?
Wicked people are cruel to poor people.
They use their evil ideas
    to take hold of weak people.
Not only do wicked people boast
    because they get the things that they want.
They also praise robbers,
    and they curse the Lord.
Wicked people are too proud to worry about God.
    They think, ‘God will not give me any trouble.’
Often the wicked person seems to have success.
    He does not respect your commands, God.
    He laughs at all his enemies.
He says to himself, ‘There will be no trouble for me.
    Nothing bad will ever happen to me or to my children.’
Plenty of lies come from his mouth,
    and he curses people.
The bad words that he speaks are very cruel,
    and they hurt people.
He hides near the villages,
    so that he can jump out and catch people.
He watches in secret to find a weak person that he can kill.
    He murders people who have done nothing wrong.
Quietly, he hides like a lion among some bushes.
    He waits there to catch a poor, weak person.
Like a hunter, he catches poor people in his net.
10 He stamps on the people that he catches,
    and he knocks them down to the ground.
The weak person falls down,
    because the wicked person is too strong.
11 The wicked person says to himself,
‘God will give me no trouble!
    He does not even see what I do.’
12 Rise up, Lord!
Do something, God,
    and knock down the wicked person!
Do not forget to help weak people.
13 Why do wicked people insult God?
They say to themselves,
    ‘God will not give me any trouble.’
14 Surely, God, you see what is happening.
You see how wicked people bring pain and trouble.
    You decide what to do about it.
The weak person trusts that you will help him.
You take care of children who have no father.
15 Take hold of the arm of the wicked, evil man!
    Break it and take away his strength!
Punish him for the bad things that he has done,
    so that he has to stop.
16 The Lord will rule as king for ever!
The nations who do not serve him
    will not remain in his land.
17 You, Lord, hear the prayers
    of people who are suffering.
When they ask you to help them,
    you make them feel strong.
18 You stand beside those who have no father,
    and those who are poor and weak.
As a result, they will no longer be afraid.
    No human on the earth can frighten them.

This is a song that David wrote for the music leader.

Trust the Lord to keep you safe

11 I have run to the Lord to keep me safe.
So do not say this to me:
    ‘Fly away like a bird to the hills![b]
See what the wicked people are doing!
They are preparing their bows and arrows.
They are hiding in dark places,
    to shoot their arrows at good, honest people.
When the law no longer has authority,
    righteous people can do nothing!’

The Lord is in his holy temple.
He rules from his throne in heaven.
    He carefully watches what people are doing.
    He knows about each person.
The Lord watches both good people and wicked people.
Good people please him,
    but he hates wicked people and cruel people.
He will send hot coal and sulphur
    to fall like rain on wicked people.
A dangerous wind will be the punishment that they deserve.
The Lord always does what is right.
He loves people to do good things.
Those who do what is right will know that God loves them.

1 Kings 1:38-2:4

38 So Zadok the priest, Nathan the prophet and Jehoiada's son Benaiah went to Solomon. David's own personal guards, the Kerethites and the Pelethites, went with them. They put Solomon on King David's mule and they led him to Gihon.

39 Zadok the priest filled a horn with special olive oil from the holy tent. Then he poured it on Solomon to anoint him as king. Then they made a loud noise with a trumpet. All the people shouted, ‘May King Solomon live for a long time!’ 40 Then all the people followed Solomon up into Jerusalem. They made music with flutes and they shouted with joy. The noise caused the ground to shake!

41 Adonijah and all the people who were with him heard the noise. They had just finished eating their feast together. When Joab heard the sound of the trumpet, he asked, ‘Why is there all that noise in the city?’[a] 42 While Joab was still speaking, Jonathan, the son of Abiathar the priest, arrived. Adonijah said to him, ‘Come in! You are an honest man, so I am sure that you are bringing good news.’ 43 Jonathan replied to Adonijah, ‘No, it is not good news! Our master King David has made Solomon king! 44 He sent these people to put Solomon onto the king's mule: Zadok the priest, Nathan the prophet, Jehoiada's son Benaiah, and the king's personal guards.[b] They took Solomon to Gihon.

45 Then Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anointed Solomon at Gihon to become king. They have taken him from there into the city with happy shouts. People are shouting everywhere. That is the noise that you can hear. 46 So Solomon now sits on the king's throne. 47 The king's officers have told our master King David that he has done a good thing. They have said to him, “We pray that your God will make Solomon even more famous than you. We pray that his kingdom will be greater than your kingdom.” After they said that, the king bent his head down as he lay on his bed. 48 He said, “We should praise the Lord, Israel's God. He deserves this, because he has chosen one of my sons to become king after me. The Lord has let me see this happen.” ’

49 When all the people with Adonijah heard Jonathan's report, they were very afraid. They got up from the feast and they ran away in different directions. 50 But Adonijah was afraid of what Solomon would do to punish him. So he ran to the holy tent. He took hold of the horns of the altar there.[c] 51 Someone told Solomon, ‘Adonijah is afraid of you. He has taken hold of the horns of the altar. He says, “I want King Solomon to promise me today that he will not punish me with death. I am his servant.” ’ 52 Solomon said, ‘If he serves me faithfully, I will not hurt him at all. But if he turns against me, he will die.’

53 Then King Solomon sent men to the holy tent to bring Adonijah down from the altar. So Adonijah came. He bent down low to respect King Solomon. Solomon said to him, ‘Go to your home.’

David dies

David knew that he would soon die. So this is what he said to his son Solomon:

‘Soon I will die, as everyone must die one day. Be strong and brave, as a man should be. Do what the Lord your God tells you to do. Live in a way that pleases him. Obey his rules, commands and laws that Moses has written down in his books of God's Law. Then everything that you do will go well, wherever you go. The Lord will also do what he has promised me that he will do. He promised this to me:

“Your descendants must be careful in how they live. They must serve me faithfully with all their mind and strength. If they do that, one of your descendants will always rule Israel as king.”

Acts 26:24-27:8

24 While Paul was still speaking to Agrippa, Festus shouted at him, ‘Paul, your mind is confused! You have learned many things. But all these things are making you crazy.’

25 Paul said, ‘Festus, sir, I am not crazy. Everything that I have said is true. It is not difficult to understand. 26 King Agrippa knows about these things. He understands what I am talking about. None of these things happened in secret places. So I am sure that he has heard news about all this. 27 King Agrippa, do you believe what God's prophets taught? I know that you do believe them.’

28 Then Agrippa said to Paul, ‘Can you change what I believe in this short time? Should I become a Christian already? Is that what you think?’

29 Paul answered him, ‘It is not important if it takes a long time or a short time. I pray to God for you and for everyone who is listening to me today. I pray that you may all become like me. But I would not want you to become a prisoner like me!’

30 Then King Agrippa, the ruler Festus, and Bernice all got ready to leave. Everyone else there also stood up. 31 After they left the meeting room, they said to each other, ‘This man has not done anything bad. We should not kill him, or even hold him in prison.’

32 King Agrippa said to Festus, ‘We could have let this man go free from the prison. But he has asked that Caesar should judge him. So we cannot let him go free.’

Soldiers take Paul to Rome

27 Some time after that, Festus decided that we should sail to Italy. So he commanded a soldier called Julius to guard Paul and some other prisoners. Julius was an officer in the Roman army. He had authority over 100 soldiers in a group called ‘The Emperor Augustus Group’.[a]

We went onto a ship that had come from Adramyttium. This ship was ready to leave. It would sail to the towns on the coast of Asia region. A man called Aristarchus also sailed with us. He came from a city in Macedonia called Thessalonica.

The next day after we left Caesarea, we arrived at Sidon. Julius was kind to Paul. He said, ‘Paul, you can go and visit your friends here. They can give you anything that you need.’ Then we sailed out across the sea again. But the wind was blowing against our ship. So we sailed round the island called Cyprus. We sailed on the side of the island where the wind was not strong. When we were near to Cilicia and Pamphylia, we sailed straight across the sea. Then we arrived at Myra, in the region called Lycia. The Roman officer found another ship there. It had sailed from Alexandria and it would sail to Italy. So the officer put us on this ship. We sailed slowly for several days. It was difficult to sail, but after some time we arrived near the town of Cnidus. Because of the strong wind, we could not continue to sail in that direction. So we sailed along the side of the island called Crete, where the wind was not strong. We sailed past the point of land called Salmone. It was still difficult to sail, so we sailed near to the coast. Then we arrived at a place called ‘Safe Port’. This port was near to the town of Lasea.

Mark 13:28-37

A lesson about the fig tree

28 Here is a lesson for you to learn about the fig tree. When the new branches on the tree start to grow, the leaves appear. Then you know that the summer will begin soon. 29 In the same way, you will see these strange things happening. Then you will know that the Son of Man will come very soon. He will be like someone at the door who is ready to come in. 30 I tell you this: The people who are alive now will not all die until all these things happen. 31 One day, the earth and the sky will have an end. But my words will be there for ever.

Nobody knows when the Son of Man will return to the world

32 Nobody knows the day or the hour when all these things will happen. Only God the Father knows when they will happen. The angels who are in heaven do not know. Even the Son does not know. 33 Watch carefully! Keep awake! You do not know the time when all these things will happen. 34 It is like when a man begins a journey. Before the master leaves his house, he gives authority to his servants. He tells each servant about the work that he should do. Then he tells the servant at the door to watch for his master's return.

35 So you must watch carefully. You do not know when the master of the house will come back. He might arrive in the evening, or in the middle of the night. Or he might arrive early in the morning, or just before the sun rises. 36 When he arrives, he may surprise you. He may even find you asleep! 37 I am saying this to you. I am also saying this to everyone else. Always be ready!’

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