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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 137

137 We sat by the rivers in Babylon
    and cried as we remembered Zion.
We hung our harps nearby, there on the willow trees.[a]
There in Babylon, those who captured us told us to sing.
    Our enemies told us to entertain them.
    They said, “Sing us one of your songs about Zion.”
But we cannot sing the Lord’s songs
    in a foreign country!
Jerusalem, if I ever forget you,
    may I never play a song again.
If I fail to remember you,
    may I never sing again.
I will always remember Jerusalem
    as my greatest joy!

Lord, be sure to punish the Edomites for what they did
    when Jerusalem was captured.
They shouted, “Destroy its buildings!
    Pull them down to the ground!”
Babylon, you will be destroyed!
    Bless the one who pays you back for what you did to us.
Bless the one who grabs your babies
    and smashes them against a rock.

Psalm 144

A song of David.

144 Praise the Lord!
    He is my Rock.
He prepares me for war.
    He trains me for battle.
He loves me and protects me.
    He is my safe place high on the mountain.
He rescues me.
    He is my shield.
I trust in him.
    He helps me rule my people.

Lord, why are people important to you?
    Why do you even notice us?
Our life is like a puff of air.
    It is like a passing shadow.

Lord, tear open the skies and come down.
    Touch the mountains, and smoke will rise from them.
Send the lightning and make my enemies run away.
    Shoot your “arrows” and make them run away.
Reach down from heaven and save me!
    Don’t let me drown in this sea of enemies.
    Save me from these foreigners.
They are all liars,
    even when they swear to tell the truth.

God, I will sing a new song[a] for you.
    I will play a ten-stringed harp and sing praise to you.
10 You are the one who gives victory to kings.
    You saved your servant David from the sword of his enemy.
11 Save me from these foreigners.
    They are all liars,
    even when they swear to tell the truth.

12 May our sons be as strong as trees
    and our daughters as beautiful as the carved columns of a palace.
13 May our barns be filled
    with crops of all kinds.
May our sheep produce so many lambs,
    that thousands of sheep will fill our fields.
14     And may our cows be heavy with calves.
May no enemy break through our walls
    or carry away any of our people.
    May there be no cries of pain in our streets.

15 How wonderful to have such blessings!
    Yes, great blessings belong to those who have the Lord as their God.

Psalm 104

104 My soul, praise the Lord!
    Lord my God, you are very great!
You are clothed with glory and honor.
    You wear light like a robe.
You spread out the skies like a curtain.
    You built your home above them.[a]
You use the thick clouds like a chariot
    and ride across the sky on the wings of the wind.
You make the winds your messengers
    and flames of fire your servants.[b]
You built the earth on its foundations,
    so it can never be moved.
You covered it with water like a blanket.
    The water covered even the mountains.
But you gave the command, and the water turned back.
    You shouted at the water, and it rushed away.
The water flowed down from the mountains into the valleys,
    to the places you made for it.
You set the limits for the seas,
    and the water will never again rise to cover the earth.

10 Lord, you cause water to flow from springs into the streams
    that flow down between the mountains.
11 The streams provide water for all the wild animals.
    Even the wild donkeys come there to drink.
12 Wild birds come to live by the pools;
    they sing in the branches of nearby trees.
13 You send rain down on the mountains.
    The earth gets everything it needs from what you have made.
14 You make the grass grow to feed the animals.
    You provide plants for the crops we grow—
    the plants that give us food from the earth.
15 You give us the wine that makes us happy,
    the oil that makes our skin soft,[c]
    and the food that makes us strong.

16 The great cedar trees of Lebanon belong to the Lord.
    He planted them and gives them the water they need.
17 That’s where the birds make their nests,
    and the storks live in the fir trees.
18 The high mountains are a home for wild goats.
    The large rocks are hiding places for rock badgers.

19 Lord, you made the moon to show us when the festivals begin.
    And the sun always knows when to set.
20 You made darkness to be the night—
    the time when wild animals come out and roam around.
21 Lions roar as they attack,
    as if they are asking God for the food he gives them.
22 When the sun rises, they leave
    and go back to their dens to rest.
23 Then people go out to do their work,
    and they work until evening.

24 Lord, you created so many things!
    With your wisdom you made them all.
    The earth is full of the living things you made.
25 Look at the ocean, so big and wide!
    It is filled with all kinds of sea life.
    There are creatures large and small—too many to count!
26 Ships sail over the ocean,
    and playing there is Leviathan,[d]
    the great sea creature you made.

27 Lord, all living things depend on you.
    You give them food at the right time.
28 You give it, and they eat it.
    They are filled with good food from your open hands.
29 When you turn away from them,
    they become frightened.
When you take away their breath,[e]
    they die, and their bodies return to the dust.
30 But when you send out your life-giving breath,[f]
    things come alive, and the world is like new again!

31 May the Lord’s glory continue forever!
    May the Lord enjoy what he made.
32 He just looks at the earth, and it trembles.
    He just touches the mountains, and smoke rises from them.

33 I will sing to the Lord for the rest of my life.
    I will sing praises to my God as long as I live.
34 May my words be pleasing to him.
    The Lord is the one who makes me happy.
35 I wish sinners would disappear from the earth.
    I wish the wicked would be gone forever.

My soul, praise the Lord!
    Praise the Lord!

Job 3

Job Curses the Day He Was Born

Then Job opened his mouth and cursed the day he was born. He said,

“I wish the day I was born would be lost forever.
    I wish the night they said, ‘It’s a boy!’ had never happened.
I wish that day had remained dark.
    I wish God above had forgotten that day
    and not let any light shine on it.
I wish that bitter day had remained as dark as death,
    covered with the darkest clouds.
I wish the darkness had carried away that night,
    that it was left off the calendar
    and not included in any of the months.
I wish that night had produced nothing
    and no happy shouts had been heard.
Some magicians think they can wake Leviathan.[a]
    So let them say their curses and curse the day I was born.
Let that day’s morning star be dark.
    Let that night wait for a morning that never comes.
    I wish it had never seen the first rays of sunlight.
10 I wish it had stopped me from being born
    and kept me from seeing all these troubles.
11 Why didn’t I die when I was born?
    Why didn’t I die as I came from my mother’s womb?
12 Why did my mother hold me on her knees?
    Why did her breasts feed me?
13 If I had died when I was born,
    I would be at peace now.
I wish I were asleep and at rest
14     with the kings and their advisors
    who built palaces that are now in ruins.
15 I wish I were buried with rulers
    who filled their graves with gold and silver.
16 Why wasn’t I a child who died at birth
    and was put in the ground?
I wish I had been buried like a baby
    who never saw the light of day.
17 There the wicked stop causing trouble,
    and the weary find rest.
18 Even prisoners find relief there;
    they no longer hear their guards shouting at them.
19 Everyone—from the greatest to the least important—will be there,
    and even the slave is free from his master.

20 “Why must a suffering person continue to live?
    Why let anyone live such a bitter life?
21 Such people want to die, but death does not come.
    They search for death more than for hidden treasure.
22 They would be happy to find their grave.
    They would rejoice to find their tomb.
23 But God keeps their future a secret
    and builds a wall around them to protect them.
24 When it is time to eat, all I can do is sigh with sadness, not joy.
    My groans pour out like water.
25 I was afraid something terrible would happen,
    and what I feared most has happened.
26 I cannot calm down or relax.
    I am too upset to rest!”

Acts 9:10-19

10 There was a follower of Jesus in Damascus named Ananias. In a vision the Lord said to him, “Ananias!”

Ananias answered, “Here I am, Lord.”

11 The Lord said to him, “Get up and go to the street called Straight Street. Find the house of Judas[a] and ask for a man named Saul from the city of Tarsus. He is there now, praying. 12 He has seen a vision in which a man named Ananias came and laid his hands on him so that he could see again.”

13 But Ananias answered, “Lord, many people have told me about this man. They told me about the many bad things he did to your holy people in Jerusalem. 14 Now he has come here to Damascus. The leading priests have given him the power to arrest all people who trust in you.[b]

15 But the Lord Jesus said to Ananias, “Go! I have chosen Saul for an important work. I want him to tell other nations, their rulers, and the people of Israel about me. 16 I will show him all that he must suffer for me.”

17 So Ananias left and went to the house of Judas. He laid his hands on Saul and said, “Saul, my brother, the Lord Jesus sent me. He is the one you saw on the road when you came here. He sent me so that you can see again and also be filled with the Holy Spirit.” 18 Immediately, something that looked like fish scales fell off Saul’s eyes. He was able to see! Then he got up and was baptized. 19 After he ate, he began to feel strong again.

Saul Begins to Tell About Jesus

Saul stayed with the followers of Jesus in Damascus for a few days.

John 6:41-51

41 Some Jews began to complain about Jesus because he said, “I am the bread that comes down from heaven.” 42 They said, “This is Jesus. We know his father and mother. He is only Joseph’s son. How can he say, ‘I came down from heaven’?”

43 But Jesus said, “Stop complaining to each other. 44 The Father is the one who sent me, and he is the one who brings people to me. I will raise them up on the last day. Anyone the Father does not bring to me cannot come to me. 45 It is written in the prophets: ‘God will teach them all.’[a] People listen to the Father and learn from him. They are the ones who come to me. 46 I don’t mean that there is anyone who has seen the Father. The only one who has ever seen the Father is the one who came from God. He has seen the Father.

47 “I can assure you that anyone who believes has eternal life. 48 I am the bread that gives life. 49 Your ancestors ate the manna God gave them in the desert, but it didn’t keep them from dying. 50 Here is the bread that comes down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will never die. 51 I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will live forever. This bread is my body. I will give my body so that the people in the world can have life.”

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International