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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 119:145-176

Qoph

145 Lord, I call to you with all my heart.
    Answer me, and I will obey your laws.
146 I call to you.
    Save me, and I will obey your rules.
147 I get up early in the morning to pray to you.
    I trust what you say.
148 Late into the night I stay awake
    to think about your word.
149 I know your love is true, so listen to me.
    Lord, you always do what is right, so let me live.
150 Here come those who have evil plans to hurt me.
    They live far away from your teachings.
151 But you are near me, Lord,
    and all your commands can be trusted.
152 Long ago, I learned from your rules
    that you made them to last forever.

Resh

153 Look at my suffering and rescue me.
    I have not forgotten your teachings.
154 Argue my case, and set me free.
    Let me live, as you promised.
155 The wicked have no hope of being saved,
    because they don’t follow your laws.
156 Lord, you are very kind.
    You always do what is right, so let me live.
157 I have many enemies trying to hurt me,
    but I have not stopped following your rules.
158 I look at those traitors and hate what I see,
    because they refuse to do what you say.
159 See how much I love your instructions!
    Lord, I know your love is true, so let me live.
160 Every word you say can be trusted.
    Your laws are fair and will last forever.

Shin

161 Powerful leaders attack me for no reason,
    but the only thing I fear is your command.
162 Your word makes me happy,
    like someone who has found a great treasure.
163 I hate lies; they make me sick!
    But I love your teachings.
164 Seven times a day I praise you
    because your laws are fair.
165 Those who love your teachings will find true peace.
    Nothing can make them fall.
166 Lord, I am waiting for you to save me.
    I obey your commands.
167 I follow your rules.
    I love them very much.
168 I obey all your instructions and rules,
    because you know everything I do.

Taw

169 Lord, listen to my cry for help.
    Make me wise, as you promised.
170 Listen to my prayer.
    Save me, as you promised.
171 I will burst into songs of praise,
    because you have taught me your laws.
172 Let my voice sing about your word,
    because all your commands are good.
173 I have chosen to follow your instructions,
    so reach out and help me!
174 Lord, I want you to save me.
    Your teachings make me happy.
175 Let me live to praise you.
    Let me find the help I need in your laws.
176 I have wandered away like a lost sheep.
    Come and find me.
I am your servant,
    and I have not forgotten your commands.

Psalm 128-130

A song for going up to the Temple.

128 Great blessings belong to those who fear and respect the Lord
    and live the way he wants.

You will get what you work for.
    You will enjoy the Lord’s blessings, and all will go well for you.
At home, your wife will have many children, like a vine full of grapes.
    The children around your table will be like an orchard full of olive trees.
Yes, the Lord will really bless those who respect him.
May the Lord bless you from Mount Zion.
    May you enjoy the blessings of Jerusalem all your life.
And may you live to see your grandchildren.

Let Israel always enjoy peace!

A song for going up to the Temple.

129 All my life enemies have attacked me.
    Say it again, Israel.
All my life enemies have attacked me,
    but they have never defeated me.
They beat me until I had deep cuts.
    My back looked like a freshly plowed field.
But the Lord does what is right;
    he cut the ropes and set me free from those wicked people.
May those who hate Zion be put to shame.
    May they be stopped and chased away.
They will be like grass on a flat roof
    that dies before it has time to grow.
The one who goes to harvest it
    will not find enough to cut and stack.
May no one walking by those wicked people ever say,
    “May the Lord bless you!
    We bless you in the name of the Lord.”

A song for going up to the Temple.

130 Lord, I am in deep trouble,
    so I am calling to you for help.
My Lord, listen to me.
    Listen to my cry for help.
Lord, if you punished people for all their sins,
    no one would be left alive.
But you forgive people,
    so they fear and respect you.

I am waiting for the Lord to help me.
    My soul waits for him.
    I trust what he says.
I am waiting for my Lord,
    like a guard waiting and waiting for the morning to come.
Israel, trust in the Lord.
    The Lord is the one who is faithful and true.
He saves us again and again,
    and he is the one who will save the people of Israel from all their sins.

2 Kings 22:14-23:3

Josiah and Huldah the Prophetess

14 So Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam, Acbor, Shaphan, and Asaiah went to Huldah the woman prophet. Huldah was the wife of Shallum son of Tikvah, son of Harhas. He took care of the priests’ clothes. Huldah was living in the second quarter in Jerusalem. They went and talked with Huldah.

15 Then Huldah said to them, “The Lord, the God of Israel, says: Tell the man who sent you to me: 16 ‘The Lord says this: I am bringing trouble on this place and on the people who live here. These are the troubles that are mentioned in the book that the king of Judah read. 17 The people of Judah have left me and have burned incense to other gods. They made me very angry. They made many idols. That is why I will show my anger against this place. My anger will be like a fire that cannot be stopped!’

18-19 “King Josiah of Judah sent you to ask advice from the Lord. Tell Josiah that this is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: ‘You heard the words I spoke against this place and those who live here. And when you heard those things, your heart was soft, and you showed your sorrow before the Lord. I said that terrible things would happen to this place. So you tore your clothes to show your sadness, and you began to cry. That is why I heard you.’ This is what the Lord says. 20 ‘I will bring you to be with your ancestors. You will die and go to your grave in peace. So your eyes will not see all the trouble that I am bringing on this place.’”

Then Hilkiah the priest, Ahikam, Acbor, Shaphan, and Asaiah gave that message to the king.

The People Hear the Law

23 King Josiah told all the leaders of Judah and Jerusalem to come and meet with him. Then the king went up to the Lord’s Temple. All the people of Judah and the people who lived in Jerusalem went with him. The priests, the prophets, and all the people—from the least important to the most important—went with him. Then he read the Book of the Agreement. This was the Book of the Law that was found in the Lord’s Temple. Josiah read the book so that all the people could hear it.

The king stood by the column and made an agreement with the Lord. He promised to follow the Lord and to obey his commands, the laws, and his rules. He promised to do this with all his heart and soul. He promised to obey the agreement written in this book. All the people stood to show that they promised to follow the agreement.

1 Corinthians 11:23-34

23 The teaching I gave you is the same that I received from the Lord: On the night when the Lord Jesus was handed over to be killed, he took bread 24 and gave thanks for it. Then he divided the bread and said, “This is my body; it is for you. Eat this to remember me.” 25 In the same way, after they ate, Jesus took the cup of wine. He said, “This cup represents the new agreement from God, which begins with my blood sacrifice. When you drink this, do it to remember me.” 26 This means that every time you eat this bread and drink this cup, you are telling others about the Lord’s death until he comes again.

27 So if you eat the bread or drink the cup of the Lord in a way that does not fit its meaning, you are sinning against the body and the blood of the Lord. 28 Before you eat the bread and drink the cup, you should examine your own attitude. 29 If you eat and drink without paying attention to those who are the Lord’s body, your eating and drinking will cause you to be judged guilty. 30 That is why many in your group are sick and weak, and many have died. 31 But if we judged ourselves in the right way, then God would not judge us. 32 But when the Lord judges us, he punishes us to show us the right way. He does this so that we will not be condemned with the world.

33 So, my brothers and sisters, when you come together to eat, wait for each other. 34 If some are too hungry to wait, they should eat at home. Do this so that your meeting together will not bring God’s judgment on you. I will tell you what to do about the other things when I come.

Matthew 9:9-17

Matthew (Levi) Follows Jesus(A)

When Jesus was leaving, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the place for collecting taxes. Jesus said to him, “Follow me.” So he got up and followed Jesus.

10 Jesus ate dinner at Matthew’s house. Many tax collectors and others with bad reputations came and ate with him and his followers. 11 The Pharisees saw that Jesus was eating with these people. They asked his followers, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and other sinners?”

12 Jesus heard them say this. So he said to them, “It is the sick people who need a doctor, not those who are healthy. 13 You need to go and learn what this Scripture means: ‘I don’t want animal sacrifices; I want you to show kindness to people.’[a] I did not come to invite good people. I came to invite sinners.”

Jesus Is Not Like Other Religious Leaders(B)

14 Then the followers of John came to Jesus and said, “We and the Pharisees fast often, but your followers don’t ever fast. Why?”

15 Jesus answered, “At a wedding the friends of the bridegroom are not sad while he is with them. They cannot fast then. But the time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them. Then they will fast.

16 “When someone sews a patch over a hole in an old coat, they never use a piece of cloth that has not already been shrunk. If they do, the patch will shrink and pull away from the coat. Then the hole will be worse. 17 Also, people never pour new wine into old wineskins. They would break, the wine would spill out, and the wineskins would be ruined. People always put new wine into new wineskins, which won’t break, and the wine stays good.”

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International