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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)
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Psalm 78

One of Asaph’s maskils.

78 My people, listen to my teachings.
    Listen to what I say.
I will tell you a story.
    I will tell you about things from the past that are hard to understand.
We have heard the story, and we know it well.
    Our fathers told it to us.
And we will not forget it.
    Our people will be telling this story to the last generation.
We will all praise the Lord
    and tell about the amazing things he did.
He made an agreement with Jacob.
    He gave the law to Israel.
He gave the commands to our ancestors.
    He told them to teach the law to their children.
Then the next generation, even the children not yet born, would learn the law.
    And they would be able to teach it to their own children.
So they would all trust in God,
    never forgetting what he had done
    and always obeying his commands.
They would not be like their ancestors,
    who were stubborn and refused to obey.
Their hearts were not devoted to God,
    and they were not faithful to him.

The men from Ephraim had their weapons,
    but they ran from the battle.
10 They did not keep their agreement with God.
    They refused to obey his teachings.
11 They forgot the great things he had done
    and the amazing things he had shown them.
12 While their ancestors watched,
    he showed his great power at Zoan in Egypt.
13 He split the Red Sea and led the people across.
    The water stood like a solid wall on both sides of them.
14 Each day God led them with the tall cloud,
    and each night he led them with the light from the column of fire.
15 He split the rocks in the desert
    and gave them an ocean of fresh water.
16 He brought a stream of water out of the rock
    and made it flow like a river!
17 But they continued sinning against him.
    They rebelled against God Most High in the desert.
18 Then they decided to test God
    by telling him to give them the food they wanted.
19 They complained about him and said,
    “Can God give us food in the desert?
20 Yes, he struck the rock and a flood of water came out.
    But can he give us bread and meat?”
21 The Lord heard what they said
    and became angry with Jacob’s people.
    He was angry with Israel,
22 because they did not trust in him.
    They did not believe that God could save them.
23-24 But then God opened the clouds above,
    and manna rained down on them for food.
It was as if doors in the sky opened,
    and grain poured down from a storehouse in the sky.
25 These people ate the food of angels.
    God sent plenty of food to satisfy them.
26 He sent a strong wind from the east,
    and by his power he made the south wind blow.
27 He made quail fall like rain until they covered the ground.
    There were so many birds that they were like sand on the seashore.
28 The birds fell in the middle of the camp,
    all around their tents.
29 The people ate until they were full.
    God had given them what they wanted.
30 But before they were fully satisfied,
    while the food was still in their mouths,
31 God became angry and killed even the strongest of them.
    He brought down Israel’s best young men.
32 But the people continued to sin!
    They did not trust in the amazing things God could do.
33 So he ended their worthless lives;
    he brought their years to a close with disaster.
34 When he killed some of them, the others would turn back to him.
    They would come running back to God.
35 They would remember that God was their Rock.
    They would remember that God Most High had saved them.
36 But they tried to fool him with their words;
    they told him lies.
37 Their hearts were not really with him.
    They were not faithful to the agreement he gave them.
38 But God was merciful.
    He forgave their sins and did not destroy them.
Many times he held back his anger.
    He never let it get out of control.
39 He remembered that they were only people,
    like a wind that blows and then is gone.
40 Oh, they caused him so much trouble in the desert!
    They made him so sad.
41 Again and again they tested his patience.
    They really hurt the Holy One of Israel.
42 They forgot about his power.
    They forgot the many times he saved them from the enemy.
43 They forgot the miracles in Egypt,
    the miracles in the fields of Zoan.
44 God turned the rivers into blood,
    and the Egyptians could not drink the water.
45 He sent swarms of flies that bit them.
    He sent the frogs that ruined their lives.
46 He gave their crops to grasshoppers
    and their other plants to locusts.
47 He destroyed their vines with hail
    and their trees with sleet.
48 He killed their animals with hail
    and their cattle with lightning.
49 He showed the Egyptians his anger.
    He sent his destroying angels against them.
50 He found a way to show his anger.
    He did not spare their lives.
    He let them die with a deadly disease.
51 He killed all the firstborn sons in Egypt.
    He killed every firstborn in Ham’s[a] family.
52 Then he led Israel like a shepherd.
    He led his people like sheep into the desert.
53 He guided them safely.
    They had nothing to fear.
    He drowned their enemies in the sea.
54 He led his people to his holy land,
    to the mountain he took with his own power.
55 He forced the other nations out before them
    and gave each family its share of the land.
    He gave each tribe of Israel a place to live.
56 But they tested God Most High and made him very sad.
    They didn’t obey his commands.
57 They turned against him and were unfaithful just like their ancestors.
    They changed directions like a boomerang.
58 They built high places and made God angry.
    They built statues of false gods and made him jealous.
59 God heard what they were doing and became very angry.
    So he rejected Israel completely!
60 He abandoned his place at Shiloh,[b]
    the Holy Tent where he lived among the people.
61 He let foreigners capture the Box of the Agreement,
    the symbol of his power and glory.
62 He showed his anger against his people
    and let them be killed in war.
63 Their young men were burned to death,
    and there were no wedding songs for their young women.
64 Their priests were killed,
    but the widows had no time to mourn for them.
65 Finally, our Lord got up
    like a man waking from his sleep,
    like a soldier after drinking too much wine.
66 He forced his enemies to turn back defeated.
    He brought them shame that will last forever.
67 Then he rejected Joseph’s family.
    He did not accept Ephraim’s family.
68 No, he chose the tribe of Judah,
    and he chose Mount Zion, the place he loves.
69 He built his holy Temple high on that mountain.
    Like the earth, God built his Temple to last forever.
70 He chose David to be his special servant.
    He took him from the sheep pens.
71 He took him away from the job of caring for sheep
    and gave him the job of caring for the descendants of Jacob—Israel, his chosen people.
72 And David led them with a pure heart
    and guided them very wisely.

2 Kings 5:19-27

19 Then Elisha said to Naaman, “Go in peace.”

So Naaman left Elisha and went a short way. 20 But Gehazi, the servant of Elisha the man of God, said, “Look, my master has let Naaman the Aramean go without accepting the gift that he brought. As the Lord lives, I will run after Naaman and get something from him.” 21 So Gehazi ran to Naaman.

Naaman saw someone running after him. He stepped down from the chariot to meet Gehazi. Naaman said, “Is everything all right?”

22 Gehazi said, “Yes, everything is all right. My master has sent me. He said, ‘Look, two young men came to me from the group of prophets[a] in the hill country of Ephraim. Please give them 75 pounds[b] of silver and two changes of clothes.’”

23 Naaman said, “Please, take 150 pounds.[c]” He persuaded Gehazi to take the silver. Naaman put 150 pounds of silver in two bags and took two changes of clothes. Then he gave these things to two of his servants. The servants carried these things for Gehazi. 24 When Gehazi came to the hill, he took these things from the servants. He sent the servants away, and they left. Then he hid those things in the house.

25 Gehazi came in and stood before his master. Elisha said to Gehazi, “Where have you been Gehazi?”

Gehazi answered, “I didn’t go anywhere.”

26 Elisha said to him, “That is not true! My heart was with you when the man turned from his chariot to meet you. This is not the time to take money, clothes, olives, grapes, sheep, cattle, or men and women servants. 27 Now you and your children will catch Naaman’s disease. You will have leprosy forever!”

When Gehazi left Elisha, his skin was as white as snow! He was sick with leprosy.

1 Corinthians 5:1-8

Don’t Let Your People Live in Sin

I don’t want to believe what I am hearing—that there is sexual sin among you. And it is such a bad kind of sexual sin that even those who have never known God don’t allow it. People say that a man there has his father’s wife. And still you are proud of yourselves! You should have been filled with sadness. And the man who committed that sin should be put out of your group. I cannot be there with you in person, but I am with you in spirit. And I have already judged the man who did this. I judged him the same as I would if I were really there. Come together in the name of our Lord Jesus. I will be with you in spirit, and you will have the power of our Lord Jesus with you. Then turn this man over to Satan. His sinful self[a] has to be destroyed so that his spirit will be saved on the day when the Lord comes again.

Your proud talk is not good. You know the saying, “Just a little yeast makes the whole batch of dough rise.” Take out all the old yeast, so that you will be a new batch of dough. You really are bread without yeast—Passover bread.[b] Yes, Christ our Passover Lamb[c] has already been killed. So let us eat our Passover meal, but not with the bread that has the old yeast, the yeast of sin and wrongdoing. But let us eat the bread that has no yeast. This is the bread of goodness and truth.

Matthew 5:27-37

Jesus Teaches About Sexual Sin

27 “You have heard that it was said, ‘You must not commit adultery.’[a] 28 But I tell you that if a man looks at a woman and wants to sin sexually with her, he has already committed that sin with her in his mind. 29 If your right eye makes you sin, take it out and throw it away. It is better to lose one part of your body than to have your whole body thrown into hell. 30 If your right hand makes you sin, cut it off and throw it away. It is better to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to go into hell.

Jesus Teaches About Divorce(A)

31 “It was also said, ‘Any man who divorces his wife must give her a written notice of divorce.’[b] 32 But I tell you that any man who divorces his wife, except for the problem of sexual sin, is causing his wife to be guilty of adultery. And whoever marries a divorced woman is guilty of adultery.

Jesus Teaches About Making Promises

33 “You have heard that it was said to our people long ago, ‘When you make a vow, you must not break your promise. Keep the vows that you make to the Lord.’[c] 34 But I tell you, when you make a promise, don’t try to make it stronger with a vow. Don’t make a vow using the name of heaven, because heaven is God’s throne. 35 Don’t make a vow using the name of the earth, because the earth belongs to him.[d] Don’t make a vow using the name of Jerusalem, because it also belongs to him, the great King. 36 And don’t even say that your own head is proof that you will keep your promise. You cannot make one hair on your head white or black. 37 Say only ‘yes’ if you mean ‘yes,’ and say only ‘no’ if you mean ‘no.’ If you say more than that, it is from the Evil One.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International