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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
International Standard Version (ISV)
Version
Psalm 105

Thanksgiving for God’s Deliverance

105 Give thanks to the Lord,
    call on his name,
        and make his deeds known among the people.
Sing to him! Praise him!
    Declare all his awesome deeds!
Exult in his holy name;
    let all[a] those who seek the Lord rejoice!
Seek the Lord and his strength;
    seek his face continually.
Remember his awesome deeds that he has done,
    his wonders and the judgments he declared.
You descendants of Abraham, his servant,
    You children of Jacob, his chosen ones.

He is the Lord our God;
    his judgments extend to the entire earth.
He remembers his eternal covenant—
    every promise he made[b] for a thousand generations,
like the covenant he made[c] with Abraham,
    and his promise to Isaac.
10 He presented it to Jacob as a decree,
    to Israel as an everlasting covenant.
11 He said: “I will give Canaan to you
    as the allotted portion that is your inheritance.”

12 When the Hebrews[d] were few in number—so very few—
    and were sojourners in it,
13 they wandered from nation to nation,
    from one kingdom to another.[e]
14 He did not allow anyone to oppress them,
    or any kings to reprove them.
15 “Don’t touch my anointed
    or hurt my prophets!”

16 He declared a famine on the land;
    destroying the entire food supply.[f]
17 He sent a man before them—
    Joseph, who had been sold as a slave.
18 They bound his feet with fetters
    and placed an iron collar on his neck,[g]
19 until the time his prediction came true,
    as the word of the Lord refined him.
20 He sent a king who released him,
    a ruler of people who set him free.
21 He made him the master over his household,
    the manager of all his possessions—
22 to discipline his rulers at will
    and make his elders wise.

23 Then Israel came to Egypt;
    indeed, Jacob lived in the land of Ham.[h]

24 He caused his people to multiply greatly;
    and be more numerous than their enemies.
25 He caused them[i] to hate his people
    and to deceive his servants.
26 He sent his servant Moses, along with Aaron,
    whom he had chosen.
27 They performed his signs among them,
    his wonders in the land of Ham.[j]

28 He sent darkness, and it became dark.
    Did they not rebel against[k] his words?
29 He turned their water into blood,
    so that the fish died.
30 Their land swarmed with frogs
    even to the chambers of their kings.
31 He spoke,
    and a swarm of insects invaded their land.[l]

32 He sent hail instead of rain,
    and lightning throughout their land.
33 It destroyed their vines and their figs,
    breaking trees throughout their country.[m]
34 Then he commanded the locust to come—
    grasshoppers without number.
35 They consumed every green plant in their land,
    and devoured the fruit of their soil.
36 He struck down every firstborn in their land,
    the first fruits of all their progeny.

37 Then he brought Israel[n] out with silver and gold,
    and no one among his tribes stumbled.
38 The Egyptians rejoiced when they left,
    because fear of Israel[o] descended on them.
39 He spread out a cloud for a cover,
    and fire for light at night.
40 Israel[p] asked, and quail came;
    food from heaven satisfied them.
41 He opened a rock, and water gushed out
    flowing like a river in the desert.

42 Indeed, he remembered his sacred promise
    to his servant Abraham.
43 He led his people out with gladness,
    his chosen ones with shouts of joy.
44 He gave to them the land of nations;
    they inherited the labor of other[q] people
45 so they might keep his statutes
    and observe his laws.
        Hallelujah!

Judges 14:1-19

Samson’s Marriage

14 A while later, Samson went down to Timnah and observed a woman in Timnah who was of Philistine origin.[a] Then he returned and told his father and mother, “In Timnah I saw a woman of Philistine origin.”[b] He ordered them, “Get her for me as a wife. Now!”[c]

His father and mother asked him, “Isn’t there a woman suitable[d] among the daughters of your relatives or among all of our people, since you’re going to get your[e] wife from the uncircumcised Philistines?”

But Samson retorted to his father, “Get her for me, since she looks fine to me.” Meanwhile, his father and mother did not know that she was from the Lord, because he had been seeking a favorable opportunity concerning the Philistines, since[f] the Philistines were dominating Israel at that time.

Then Samson went down in the direction of Timnah with his father and mother and arrived as far as the vineyards of Timnah. And—surprise!—a young lion came roaring at him! The Spirit of the Lord rushed upon him, and he ripped the lion[g] apart as one might dissect a young goat, even though he carried nothing in his hand. But he didn’t tell his father and mother what he had done. Then he went down and talked to the woman, and she looked fine to Samson. When he came back later to marry[h] her, he turned aside to observe the lion’s carcass. Amazingly, there was a swarm of bees in the body of the lion, complete with honey. So he scraped some out into his hands and went on his way, eating all the while. When he met his father and mother, he gave some[i] to them, and they ate it, too. But he didn’t inform them that he had scraped the honey from the carcass of the lion.

Samson’s Riddle

10 Later on, when his father went down to visit[j] the woman, Samson threw a party there, since young men customarily did this. 11 When they saw him, they brought 30 companions to accompany him. 12 “Let me tell you a riddle,” Samson told them. “If you can solve it during this week-long festival, I’ll give you 30 linen garments and 30 formal garments.[k] 13 But if you don’t solve it,[l] then you’ll give me 30 linen garments and 30 formal garments.”[m]

“Tell us your riddle and we’ll solve it,” they responded.

14 So he told them:

From the eater came something edible;
    from the strong something sweet.

For three days they couldn’t solve the riddle.

15 The next[n] day, they told Samson’s wife, “Coax your husband to explain the riddle or we’ll set fire to your father’s house—with you in it! You’ve invited us here to make us paupers, haven’t you?”

16 So Samson’s wife cried in front of him and accused him, “You only hate me. You don’t love me. You’ve told a riddle to my relatives, but you haven’t told the solution[o] to me.”

Samson responded, “Look, I haven’t told my parents,[p] either. Why[q] should I tell you?”

17 So she kept on crying in front of him for the entire seven days of the wedding party. On the seventh day he told the solution[r] to her because she nagged him, and then she told the solution to[s] the riddle to her relatives.

18 Then the men of the city answered him just before sunset on the seventh day:

“What is sweeter than honey?
    What are stronger than lions?”

Samson[t] responded,

“If you hadn’t plowed with my heifer,
    you wouldn’t have solved my riddle.”

19 Then the Spirit of the Lord rushed upon him, and he went down to Ashkelon, killed 30 men, took their belongings, and gave the garments to those who had told him the solution to[u] the riddle. He remained furious, left for his father’s house,

Acts 6:15-7:16

15 Then everyone who was seated in the Council[a] glared at him and saw that his face was like the face of an angel.

Stephen Defends Himself

Then the high priest asked, “Is this true?”

Stephen replied:

“Listen, brothers and fathers!

“The glorious God appeared to our ancestor Abraham while he was in Mesopotamia before he settled in Haran. God[b] told him, ‘Leave your country and your relatives and go to the land I’ll show you.’[c] So he left the country of the Chaldeans and settled in Haran. Then after the death of his father, God had him move to this country where you now live. God[d] gave him no property here,[e] not even a foot of land,[f] yet he promised to give it to him and to his descendants[g] after him as a permanent possession, even though he had no child.

“This is what God promised: His descendants would be strangers in a foreign country, and its people[h] would enslave them and oppress them for 400 years. ‘But I will punish the nation they serve,’ said God, ‘and afterwards they will leave and worship me in this place.’[i]

Later, God[j] gave Abraham[k] the covenant of circumcision. Later, he fathered Isaac and circumcised him on the eighth day. Then Isaac fathered Jacob, and Jacob fathered[l] the twelve patriarchs.

“Joseph’s brothers[m] became jealous of him and sold Joseph as a slave[n] in Egypt. However, God was with him 10 and rescued him from all his troubles. He granted him favor and wisdom before Pharaoh, king of Egypt, who appointed him ruler of Egypt and of his whole household.

11 “But a famine spread throughout Egypt and Canaan, and with it great suffering, and our ancestors couldn’t find any food. 12 But when Jacob heard that there was grain in Egypt, he sent our ancestors on their first trip. 13 On their second trip, Joseph made himself known to his brothers, and Joseph introduced his family[o] to Pharaoh. 14 Then Joseph invited his father Jacob and all his relatives to come to him in Egypt[p]—75 persons in all. 15 So Jacob went down to Egypt. Then he and our ancestors died. 16 They were brought back to Shechem and laid in the tomb that Abraham had bought at a high price[q] from Hamor’s descendants in Shechem.

John 4:27-42

27 At this point his disciples arrived, and they were astonished that he was talking to a woman. Yet no one said, “What do you want from her?”[a] or, “Why are you talking to her?” 28 Then the woman left her water jar and went back to town. She told people, 29 “Come, see a man who told me everything I’ve ever done! Could he possibly be the Messiah?”[b] 30 The people[c] left the town and started on their way to him.

31 Meanwhile, the disciples were urging him, “Rabbi,[d] have something to eat.”

32 But he told them, “I have food to eat that you know nothing about.”

33 So the disciples began to say to one another, “No one has brought him anything to eat, have they?”

34 Jesus told them, “My food is doing the will of the one who sent me and completing his work. 35 You say, don’t you, ‘In four more months the harvest will begin?’ Look, I tell you, open your eyes and observe that the fields are ready[e] for harvesting now! 36 The one who harvests is already receiving his wages and gathering a crop for eternal life, so that the one who sows and the one who harvests may rejoice together. 37 In this respect the saying is true: ‘One person sows, and another person harvests.’[f] 38 I have sent you to harvest what you have not worked for. Others have worked, and you have adopted their work as your own.”

39 Now many of the Samaritans of that town believed in Jesus[g] because the woman had testified, “He told me everything I’ve ever done.”

40 So when the Samaritans came to Jesus,[h] they asked him to stay with them, and he stayed there for two days. 41 And many more believed because of what he said. 42 They kept telling the woman, “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, because now we have heard him ourselves, and we know that he really is the Savior of the world.”

International Standard Version (ISV)

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