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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 131-135

A song of David for going up to the Temple.

131 Lord, I don’t feel proud.
    I don’t see myself as better than others.
I am not thinking about doing great things
    or reaching impossible goals.
No, right now I am calm and quiet,
    like a child after nursing,
    content in its mother’s arms.[a]

Israel, trust in the Lord.
    Trust in him now and forever!

A song for going up to the Temple.

132 Lord, remember how David suffered.
He made a promise to you, Lord,
    an oath to the Mighty God of Jacob.
He said, “I will not go into my house
    or lie down on my bed.
I will not sleep
    or let my eyes rest,
until I find a home for the Lord,
    a tent for the Mighty God of Jacob!”

We heard about this in Ephrathah.[b]
    We found the Box of the Agreement at Kiriath Jearim.[c]
Now, let’s go to the Lord’s house.
    Let’s worship at his throne.[d]
Lord, get up[e] and go to your resting place;
    go with the Box that shows your power.
May your priests be clothed in victory
    and your loyal followers be filled with joy.
10 For the sake of your servant David,
    don’t reject your chosen king.[f]
11 The Lord made a promise to David, an oath of loyalty to him:
    “I will always put one of your descendants on your throne.
12 If your descendants obey my agreement and the laws I teach them,
    then the king will always be someone from your family.”

13 The Lord has chosen Zion to be the place for his Temple,
    the place he wanted for his home.
14 He said, “This will always be my place of rest.
    This is where I want to sit on my throne.
15 I will bless this city with plenty of food.
    Even the poor will have enough to eat.
16 I will clothe the priests with salvation,
    and my followers will be filled with joy.
17 This is where I will make David’s family strong.
    I will never let the lamp of my chosen king stop burning.
18 I will cover his enemies with shame,
    and on his head will be a shining crown.”

A song of David for going up to the Temple.

133 Oh, how wonderful, how pleasing it is
    when God’s people all come together as one[g]!
It is like the sweet-smelling oil that is poured over the high priest’s[h] head,
    that runs down his beard flowing over his robes.
It is like a gentle rain[i] from Mount Hermon falling on Mount Zion.
    It is there that the Lord has promised his blessing of eternal life.

A song for going up to the Temple.

134 Praise the Lord, all his servants
    who serve in the Temple at night.
Lift your hands toward the Temple,
    and praise the Lord.
May the Lord, who made heaven and earth,
    bless you from Zion.

135 Praise the Lord!
Praise the name of the Lord!
    Praise him, you servants of the Lord,
you who serve in the Lord’s Temple,
    in the courtyard of the Temple of our God.
Praise the Lord, because he is good.
    Praise his name, because it brings such joy!

The Lord chose Jacob to be his own.
    Yes, he chose Israel to be his own people.
I know the Lord is great!
    Our Lord is greater than all the gods!
The Lord does whatever he wants,
    in heaven and on earth, in the seas and the deep oceans.
He brings the clouds from the other side of the earth.
    He sends the lightning and the rain,
    and he opens the doors to release the winds.
He destroyed the firstborn males of the people in Egypt and their animals.
He did great wonders and miracles in Egypt.
    He used them against Pharaoh and his officials.
10 He defeated many nations
    and killed powerful kings.
11 He defeated Sihon, king of the Amorites,
    Og, king of Bashan,
    and all the kingdoms in Canaan.
12 Then he gave their land to Israel, his people.

13 Lord, your name will be famous forever!
    Lord, people will remember you forever and ever.
14 The Lord defends his people;
    he is kind to his servants.
15 The gods of other nations are only gold and silver idols
    that people have made.
16 They have mouths, but cannot speak.
    They have eyes, but cannot see.
17 They have ears, but cannot hear.
    They have mouths, but no breath.
18 Those who make idols and trust in them
    will become just like the idols they have made.

19 Family of Israel, praise the Lord!
    Aaron’s family, praise the Lord!
20 Levi’s family, praise the Lord!
    All you who worship the Lord, praise the Lord!
21 The Lord should be praised from Zion,
    from Jerusalem, his home.

Praise the Lord!

Numbers 23:11-26

11 Balak said to Balaam, “What have you done to me? I brought you here to curse my enemies, but you have blessed them!”

12 But Balaam answered, “I must say the things that the Lord tells me to say.”

13 Then Balak said to him, “So come with me to another place. At that place you can see more of these people. You cannot see all of them—you can only see part of them. Maybe from that place you can curse them for me.” 14 So Balak led Balaam to Watchmen Hills.[a] This was on top of Mount Pisgah. There Balak built seven altars and killed a bull and a ram on each altar as a sacrifice.

15 Then Balaam said to Balak, “Stay here by this altar while I go meet with God over there.”

16 So the Lord came to Balaam and told Balaam what to say. Then he told Balaam to go back to Balak and say these things. 17 So Balaam went to Balak. Balak was still standing near the altar. The leaders of Moab were there with him. Balak saw Balaam coming and said, “What did the Lord say?”

Balaam’s Second Message

18 Then Balaam said this:

“Stand up, Balak, and listen to me.
    Hear me, Balak son of Zippor.
19 God is not a man;
    he will not lie.
God is not a human being;
    his decisions will not change.
If he says he will do something,
    then he will do it.
If he makes a promise,
    then he will do what he promised.
20 He told me to bless them.
    He blessed them, so I cannot change that.
21 God saw no wrong in Jacob’s people.
    He saw no sin in the Israelites.
The Lord is their God,
    and he is with them.
    The Great King is with them!
22 God brought them out of Egypt.
    They are as strong as a wild ox.
23 There is no power that can defeat the people of Jacob.
    There is no magic that can stop the Israelites.
People will say this about Jacob and the Israelites:
    ‘Look at the great things God did!’[b]
24 The people are as strong as lions,
    and they fight like lions.
And a lion will not rest until it eats what it has caught,
    until it drinks the blood of what it has killed.”

25 Then Balak said to Balaam, “You didn’t ask for good things to happen to these people, but you didn’t ask for bad things to happen to them either!”

26 Balaam answered, “I told you before that I can only say what the Lord tells me to say.”

Romans 8:1-11

Life in the Spirit

So now anyone who is in Christ Jesus is not judged guilty. That is because in Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit that brings life made you[a] free. It made you free from the law that brings sin and death. The law was without power because it was made weak by our sinful selves. But God did what the law could not do: He sent his own Son to earth with the same human life that everyone else uses for sin. God sent him to be an offering to pay for sin. So God used a human life to destroy sin. He did this so that we could be right just as the law said we must be. Now we don’t live following our sinful selves. We live following the Spirit.

People who live following their sinful selves think only about what they want. But those who live following the Spirit are thinking about what the Spirit wants them to do. If your thinking is controlled by your sinful self, there is spiritual death. But if your thinking is controlled by the Spirit, there is life and peace. Why is this true? Because anyone whose thinking is controlled by their sinful self is against God. They refuse to obey God’s law. And really they are not able to obey it. Those who are ruled by their sinful selves cannot please God.

But you are not ruled by your sinful selves. You are ruled by the Spirit, if that Spirit of God really lives in you. But whoever does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to Christ. 10 Your body will always be dead because of sin. But if Christ is in you, then the Spirit gives you life, because Christ made you right with God. 11 God raised Jesus from death. And if God’s Spirit lives in you, he will also give life to your bodies that die. Yes, God is the one who raised Christ from death, and he will raise you to life through his Spirit living in you.

Matthew 22:1-14

A Story About People Invited to a Dinner(A)

22 Jesus used some more stories to teach the people. He said, “God’s kingdom is like a king who prepared a wedding feast for his son. He invited some people to the feast. When it was ready, the king sent his servants to tell the people to come. But they refused to come to the king’s feast.

“Then the king sent some more servants. He said to them, ‘I have already invited the people. So tell them that my feast is ready. I have killed my best bulls and calves to be eaten. Everything is ready. Come to the wedding feast.’

“But when the servants told the people to come, they refused to listen. They all went to do other things. One went to work in his field, and another went to his business. Some of the other people grabbed the servants, beat them, and killed them. The king was very angry. He sent his army to kill those who murdered his servants. And the army burned their city.

“After that the king said to his servants, ‘The wedding feast is ready. I invited those people, but they were not good enough to come to my feast. So go to the street corners and invite everyone you see. Tell them to come to my feast.’ 10 So the servants went into the streets. They gathered all the people they could find, good and bad alike, and brought them to where the wedding feast was ready. And the place was filled with guests.

11 “When the king came in to meet the guests, he saw a man there who was not dressed in the right clothes for a wedding. 12 The king said, ‘Friend, how were you allowed to come in here? You are not wearing the right clothes.’ But the man said nothing. 13 So the king told some servants, ‘Tie this man’s hands and feet. Throw him out into the darkness, where people are crying and grinding their teeth with pain.’

14 “Yes, many people are invited. But only a few are chosen.”

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International