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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)
Version
Psalm 56-58

To the director: To the tune “The Dove in the Distant Oak.” A miktam of David written when the Philistines captured him in Gath.

56 God, people have attacked me, so be merciful to me.
    They have been chasing me all day, closing in to attack me.
My enemies come at me constantly.
    There are too many fighters to count.[a]
When I am afraid,
    I put my trust in you.
I trust God, so I am not afraid of what people can do to me!
    I praise God for his promise to me.
My enemies are always twisting my words.
    They are always making plans against me.
They hide together and watch every move I make,
    hoping for some way to kill me.
God, send them away because of the bad things they did.
    Show your anger and defeat those people.
You know I am very upset.
    You know how much I have cried.
    Surely you have kept an account of all my tears.

I know that when l call for help, my enemies will turn and run.
    I know that because God is with me!
10 I praise God for his promise.
    I praise the Lord for his promise to me.
11 I trust God, so I am not afraid
    of what people can do to me!

12 God, I will keep the special promises I made to you.
    I will give you my thank offering.
13 You saved me from death.
    You kept me from being defeated.
So I will serve you in the light
    that only the living can see.

To the director: To the tune “Don’t Destroy.” A miktam of David written when he escaped from Saul and went into the cave.

57 God, be merciful to me.
    Be kind because my soul trusts in you.
I have come to you for protection,
    while the trouble passes.
I pray to God Most High for help,
    and he takes care of me completely!
From heaven he helps me and saves me.
    He will punish the one who attacks me. Selah
God will remain loyal to me
    and send his love to protect me.

My life is in danger.
    My enemies are all around me.
They are like man-eating lions,
    with teeth like spears or arrows
    and tongues like sharp swords.

God, rise above the heavens!
    Let all the world see your glory.
My enemies set a trap for my feet
    to bring me down.
They dug a deep pit to catch me,
    but they fell into it. Selah

God, I am ready, heart and soul,
    to sing songs of praise.
Wake up, my soul!
    Harps and lyres, wake up,
    and let’s wake the dawn!
My Lord, I will praise you before all people.
    I will sing praises about you to every nation.
10 Your faithful love is higher
    than the highest clouds in the sky!
11 Rise above the heavens, God.
    Let all the world see your glory.

To the director: To the tune “Don’t Destroy.” A miktam of David.

58 You judges are not being fair in your decisions.
    You are not judging people fairly.
No, you only think of evil things to do.
    You do violent crimes in this country.
Those wicked people started doing wrong as soon as they were born.
    They have been liars from birth.
Their anger is as deadly as the poison of a snake.[b]
    They shut their ears like a deaf cobra
that does not listen to the music of the snake charmers,
    no matter how well they play.

God, they are like lions.
    So, Lord, break their teeth.
May they disappear like water down a drain.
    May they be crushed like weeds on a path.[c]
May they be like snails melting away as they move.
    May they be like a baby born dead, who never saw the light of day.
May they be destroyed suddenly,
    like the thorns that are burned to quickly heat a pot.

10 Good people will be happy
    when they see the wicked getting the punishment they deserve.
They will feel like soldiers
    walking through the blood of their enemies![d]
11 Then people will say, “Good people really are rewarded.
    Yes, there is a God judging the world!”[e]

Psalm 64-65

To the director: A song of David.

64 God, listen to my complaint.
    Save me from the terrible threats of my enemies!
Protect me from the secret plans of the wicked.
    Hide me from that gang of evil people.
They sharpen their tongues to use like swords.
    They aim their poisonous words like arrows.
Suddenly, from their hiding places, they let their arrows fly.
    They shoot to kill innocent people.
They encourage each other to do wrong.
    They talk about setting traps and say, “No one will see them here!
No one will discover our crime.
    We have the perfect plan!”
Yes, people can be very tricky and hard to understand.
But suddenly, God will shoot his arrows,
    and those wicked people will be hit.
He will use their own words against them,
    and they will be destroyed.
Then everyone who sees them
    will shake their heads in amazement.
People will see what God has done.
    They will tell other people about him.
Then everyone will learn more about God.
    They will learn to fear and respect him.
10 Good people are happy to serve the Lord.
    They depend on him to protect them.
    All those who want to do right will praise him!

To the director: A praise song of David.

65 God in Zion, we praise you
    and give you what we promised.
Anyone can come to you,
    and you will listen to their prayers.
When our sins become too heavy for us,
    you wipe them away.
Oh, how wonderful it is to be the people you chose
    to come and stay in your Temple.
And we are so happy to have the wonderful things
    that are in your Temple, your holy palace.
God, you answer our prayers and do what is right.
    You do amazing things to save us.
People all over the world know they can trust in you,
    even those who live across the sea.
You made the mountains.
    We see your power all around us.
You can calm the roughest seas
    or the nations raging around us.
People all around the world are amazed at the wonderful things you do.
    You make all people, east and west, sing with joy.
You take care of the land.
    You water it and make it fertile.
Your streams are always filled with water.
    That’s how you make the crops grow.
10 You pour rain on the plowed fields;
    you soak the fields with water.
You make the ground soft with rain,
    and you make the young plants grow.
11 You start the new year with a good harvest.
    You end the year with many crops.[a]
12 The desert and hills are covered with grass.
13 The pastures are covered with sheep.
    The valleys are filled with grain.
    Everything is singing and shouting for joy.

Genesis 41:46-57

46 Joseph was 30 years old when he began serving the king of Egypt. He traveled throughout the country of Egypt. 47 During the seven good years, the crops in Egypt grew very well. 48 Joseph saved the food in Egypt during those seven years and stored the food in the cities. In every city he stored grain that grew in the fields around the city. 49 Joseph stored so much grain that it was like the sands of the sea. He stored so much grain that it could not be measured.

50 Joseph’s wife, Asenath, was the daughter of Potiphera, the priest in the city of On. Before the first year of hunger came, Joseph and Asenath had two sons. 51 Joseph named the first son Manasseh.[a] He was given this name because Joseph said, “God made me forget all my hard work and everything back home in my father’s house.” 52 Joseph named the second son Ephraim.[b] Joseph gave him this name because he said, “I had great troubles, but God has made me successful in everything.”

The Famine Begins

53 For seven years people had all the food they needed, but those years ended. 54 Then the seven years of hunger began, just as Joseph had said. No food grew anywhere in any of the countries in that area. But in Egypt people had plenty to eat because Joseph had stored the grain. 55 The famine began, and the people cried to Pharaoh for food. Pharaoh said to the Egyptian people, “Go ask Joseph what to do.”

56 There was famine everywhere, so Joseph gave the people grain from the warehouses. He sold the stored grain to the people of Egypt. The famine was bad in Egypt, 57 but the famine was bad everywhere. So people from the countries around Egypt had to come to Joseph in Egypt to buy grain.

1 Corinthians 4:8-21

You think you have everything you need. You think you are rich. You think you have become kings without us. I wish you really were kings. Then we could rule together with you. But it seems to me that God has given me and the other apostles the last place. We are like prisoners condemned to die, led in a parade for the whole world to see—not just people but angels too. 10 We are fools for Christ, but you think you are so wise in Christ. We are weak, but you think you are so strong. People give you honor, but they don’t honor us. 11 Even now we still don’t have enough to eat or drink, and we don’t have enough clothes. We often get beatings. We have no homes. 12 We work hard with our own hands to feed ourselves. When people insult us, we ask God to bless them. When people treat us badly, we accept it. 13 When people say bad things about us, we try to say something that will help them. But people still treat us like the world’s garbage—everyone’s trash.

14 I am not trying to make you feel ashamed, but I am writing this to counsel you as my own dear children. 15 You may have ten thousand teachers in Christ, but you don’t have many fathers. Through the Good News I became your father in Christ Jesus. 16 So I beg you to be like me. 17 That is why I am sending Timothy to you. He is my son in the Lord. I love him and trust him. He will help you remember the way I live in Christ Jesus—a way of life that I teach in every meeting of the church wherever I am.

18 Some of you are acting so proud, it seems as though you think I won’t be coming there again. 19 But I will come to you very soon, the Lord willing. Then I will see if these proud talkers have the power to do anything more than talk. 20 God’s kingdom is not seen in talk but in power. 21 Which do you want: that I come to you with punishment, or that I come with love and gentleness?

Mark 3:7-19

Many Follow Jesus

Jesus went away with his followers to the lake. A large crowd of people from Galilee followed them. Many also came from Judea, from Jerusalem, from Idumea, from the area across the Jordan River, and from the area around Tyre and Sidon. These people came because they heard about all that Jesus was doing.

Jesus saw how many people there were, so he told his followers to get a small boat and make it ready for him. He wanted the boat so that the crowds of people could not push against him. 10 He had healed many of them, so all the sick people were pushing toward him to touch him. 11 Some people had evil spirits inside them. When the evil spirits saw Jesus, they bowed before him and shouted, “You are the Son of God!” 12 But Jesus gave the spirits a strong warning not to tell anyone who he was.

Jesus Chooses His Twelve Apostles(A)

13 Then Jesus went up on a hill and invited those he wanted to go with him. So they joined him there. 14 And he chose twelve men and called them apostles. He wanted these twelve men to be with him, and he wanted to send them to other places to tell people God’s message. 15 He also wanted them to have the power to force demons out of people. 16 These are the names of the twelve men Jesus chose:

Simon (the one Jesus named Peter),

17 James and his brother John, the sons of Zebedee (the ones Jesus named Boanerges, which means “Sons of Thunder”),

18 Andrew,

Philip,

Bartholomew,

Matthew,

Thomas,

James, the son of Alphaeus,

Thaddaeus,

Simon, the Zealot,

19 Judas Iscariot (the one who handed Jesus over to his enemies).

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International