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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 106

106 Praise the Lord!
Give thanks to the Lord because he is good!
    His faithful love will last forever!
No one can describe how great the Lord really is.
    No one can praise him enough.
Those who obey his commands are happy.
    They do good things all the time.

Lord, remember me when you show kindness to your people.
    Remember to save me too!
Let me share in the good things
    that you do for your chosen people.
Let me rejoice with your nation.
    Let me join with your people in praise.

We sinned just as our ancestors did.
    We were wrong; we did bad things!
Lord, our ancestors learned nothing
    from the miracles you did in Egypt.
They forgot your kindness at the Red Sea
    and rebelled against you.

But the Lord saved our ancestors for the honor of his name.
    He saved them to show his great power.
He gave the command, and the Red Sea became dry.
    He led them through the deep sea on land as dry as the desert.
10 He saved our ancestors
    and rescued them from their enemies.
11 He covered their enemies with the sea.
    Not one of them escaped!

12 Then our ancestors believed what he had said.
    They sang praises to him.
13 But they quickly forgot about what he did.
    They did not listen to his advice.
14 They became hungry in the desert,
    and they tested him in the wilderness.
15 He gave them what they asked for,
    but he also gave them a terrible disease.
16 The people became jealous of Moses.
    They became jealous of Aaron, the Lord’s holy priest.
17 The ground opened up and swallowed Dathan.
    Then the ground closed up and covered Abiram’s group.
18 Then a fire burned that mob of people.
    It burned those wicked people.
19 The people made a golden calf at Mount Horeb.
    They worshiped a statue!
20 They traded their glorious God
    for a statue of a grass-eating bull!
21 They forgot all about God, the one who saved them,
    the one who did the miracles in Egypt.
22 He did amazing things there in Ham’s country[a]!
    He did awesome things at the Red Sea!

23 God wanted to destroy those people,
    but Moses, the leader he chose, stood in the way.
God was very angry, but Moses begged him to stop,
    so God did not destroy the people.[b]

24 But then they refused to go into the wonderful land of Canaan.
    They did not believe that God would help them defeat the people there.
25 Our ancestors complained in their tents
    and refused to obey the Lord.
26 So he swore that they would die
    in the desert.
27 He promised to scatter them among the nations
    and to let other people defeat their descendants.

28 At Baal Peor they joined in worshiping Baal
    and ate sacrifices to honor the dead.[c]
29 The Lord became angry with his people,
    so he made them sick.
30 But Phinehas prayed[d] to God,
    and God stopped the sickness.
31 He considered what Phinehas did a good work,
    and it will be remembered forever and ever.

32 At Meribah the people made the Lord angry
    and created trouble for Moses.
33 They upset Moses,
    and he spoke without stopping to think.

34 The Lord told the people to destroy the other nations living in Canaan.
    But the Israelites did not obey him.
35 They mixed with the other people
    and did what those people were doing.
36 They began worshiping the false gods those people worshiped.
    And their idols became a trap.
37 They even offered their own children
    as sacrifices to demons.
38 They killed their innocent sons and daughters
    and offered them to the false gods of Canaan.
    So the land was polluted with the sin of murder.
39 They were unfaithful to him,
    and they became dirty with the sins of other nations.
40 So the Lord became angry with his people.
    He rejected those who belonged to him.
41 He gave his people to other nations
    and let their enemies rule over them.
42 Their enemies controlled them
    and made life hard for them.
43 He saved his people many times,
    but they turned against him and did what they wanted to do.
    His people did many bad things.
44 But whenever they were in trouble,
    he listened to their prayers.
45 He always remembered his agreement,
    and because of his faithful love, he comforted them.
46 Other nations took them as prisoners,
    but the Lord caused them to be kind to his people.
47 Lord our God, save us!
    Bring us back together from those nations.
Then we will give thanks to your holy name
    and joyfully praise you.
48 Praise the Lord, the God of Israel!
    He always was and will always be worthy of praise.
Let all the people say, “Amen!”

Praise the Lord!

2 Kings 21:1-18

Manasseh Begins His Evil Rule Over Judah

21 Manasseh was twelve years old when he began to rule. He ruled 55 years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Hephzibah.

Manasseh did what the Lord said was wrong. He did the terrible things the other nations did. (And the Lord forced those nations to leave their country when the Israelites came.) Manasseh rebuilt the high places that his father Hezekiah had destroyed. He also built altars for Baal and made an Asherah pole, just as King Ahab of Israel had done. Manasseh worshiped and served the stars of heaven. He built altars to honor false gods in the Lord’s Temple. (This is the place the Lord was talking about when he said, “I will put my name in Jerusalem.”) Manasseh built altars for the stars of heaven in the two courtyards of the Lord’s Temple. He sacrificed his own son and burned him on the altar.[a] He used different ways of trying to know the future. He visited mediums and wizards.

Manasseh did more and more things that the Lord saw as evil, which made the Lord angry. Manasseh made a carved statue of Asherah. He put this statue in the Temple. The Lord had said to David and to David’s son Solomon about this Temple: “I have chosen Jerusalem from all the cities in Israel. I will put my name in the Temple in Jerusalem forever. I will not cause the Israelites to leave the land that I gave to their ancestors. I will let the people stay in their land if they obey everything I commanded them and all the teachings that my servant Moses gave them.” But the people did not listen to God. Manasseh did more evil things than all the nations that lived in Canaan before Israel came. And the Lord destroyed those nations when the Israelites came to take their land.

10 The Lord used his servants the prophets to say this: 11 “King Manasseh of Judah has done these hated things and has done more evil than the Amorites before him. He also has caused Judah to sin because of his idols. 12 So the Lord, the God of Israel, says, ‘Look! I will bring so much trouble against Jerusalem and Judah that anyone who hears about it will be shocked.[b] 13 I will stretch the measuring line of Samaria[c] and the plumb line[d] of Ahab’s family over Jerusalem. A man wipes a dish, and then he turns it upside down. I will do that to Jerusalem. 14 There will still be a few of my people left, but I will leave them. I will give them to their enemies. Their enemies will take them as prisoners—they will be like the valuable things soldiers take in war. 15 This is because my people did what I said was wrong. They have made me angry with them since the day their ancestors came up out of Egypt. 16 And Manasseh killed many innocent people. He filled Jerusalem from one end to another with blood. And all these sins are in addition to the sins that caused Judah to sin. Manasseh caused Judah to do what the Lord said was wrong.’”

17 All the things that Manasseh did, including the sins that he committed, are written in the book, The History of the Kings of Judah. 18 Manasseh died and was buried with his ancestors. He was buried in the garden at his house. It was called the “Garden of Uzza.” His son Amon became the new king after him.

1 Corinthians 10:14-11:1

14 So, my dear friends, stay away from worshiping idols. 15 You are intelligent people. Judge for yourselves the truth of what I say now. 16 The cup of blessing[a] that we give thanks for is a sharing in the blood sacrifice of Christ, isn’t it? And the bread that we break is a sharing in the body of Christ, isn’t it? 17 There is one loaf of bread, so we who are many are one body, because we all share in that one loaf.

18 And think about what the people of Israel do. When they eat the sacrifices,[b] they are united by sharing what was offered on the altar. 19 So, am I saying that sacrifices to idols are the same as those Jewish sacrifices? No, because an idol is nothing, and the things offered to idols are worth nothing. 20 But I am saying that when food is sacrificed to idols, it is an offering to demons, not to God. And I don’t want you to share anything with demons. 21 You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and then go drink a cup that honors demons. You cannot share a meal at the Lord’s table and then go share a meal that honors demons. 22 Doing that would make the Lord jealous.[c] Do you really want to do that? Do you think we are stronger than he is?

Use Your Freedom for God’s Glory

23 “All things are allowed,” you say. But not all things are good. “All things are allowed.” But some things don’t help anyone. 24 Try to do what is good for others, not just what is good for yourselves.

25 Eat any meat that is sold in the meat market. Don’t ask questions about it to see if it is something you think is wrong to eat. 26 You can eat it, “because the earth and everything in it belong to the Lord.”[d]

27 Someone who is not a believer might invite you to eat with them. If you want to go, then eat anything that is put before you. Don’t ask questions to see if it is something you think is wrong to eat. 28 But if someone tells you, “That food was offered to idols,” then don’t eat it. That’s because some people think it is wrong, and it might cause a problem for the person who told you that. 29 I don’t mean that you think it is wrong. But the other person might think it is wrong. That’s the only reason not to eat it. My own freedom should not be judged by what another person thinks. 30 I eat the meal with thankfulness. So I don’t want to be criticized because of something I thank God for.

31 So if you eat, or if you drink, or if you do anything, do it for the glory of God. 32 Never do anything that might make other people do wrong—Jews, non-Jews, or anyone in God’s church. 33 I do the same thing. I try to please everyone in every way. I am not trying to do what is good for me. I am trying to do what is good for the most people so that they can be saved.

11 Follow my example, just as I follow the example of Christ.

Matthew 8:28-34

Jesus Sends Demons Out of Two Men(A)

28 Jesus arrived at the other side of the lake in the country of the Gadarene[a] people. There, two men who had demons inside them came to him. They lived in the burial caves and were so dangerous that no one could use the road by those caves. 29 They came to Jesus and shouted, “What do you want with us, Son of God? Did you come here to punish us before the right time?”

30 Near that place there was a large herd of pigs feeding. 31 The demons begged Jesus, “If you make us leave these men, please send us into that herd of pigs.”

32 Jesus said to them, “Go!” So the demons left the men and went into the pigs. Then the whole herd of pigs ran down the hill into the lake, and all were drowned. 33 The men who had the work of caring for the pigs ran away. They went into town and told the people everything that happened, especially about the men who had the demons. 34 Then the whole town went out to see Jesus. When the people saw him, they begged him to leave their area.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International