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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 Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Psalm 102

A Cry for Help

A prayer of a person who is suffering when he is discouraged and tells the Lord his complaints.

102 Lord, listen to my prayer.
    Let my cry for help come to you.
Do not hide from me
    in my time of trouble.
Pay attention to me.
    When I cry for help, answer me quickly.

My life is passing away like smoke.
    My bones are burned up with fire.
My heart is like grass
    that has been cut and dried.
    I forget to eat.
Because of my grief,
    my skin hangs on my bones.
I am like a desert owl.
    I am like an owl living among the ruins.
I lie awake.
    I am like a lonely bird on a housetop.
All day long enemies insult me.
    Those who make fun of me use my name as a curse.
I eat ashes as my food.
    My tears fall into my drinks.
10 Because of your great anger,
    you have picked me up and thrown me away.
11 My days are like a passing shadow.
    I am like dried grass.

12 But, Lord, you rule forever.
    Your fame continues from now on.
13 You will come and have mercy on Jerusalem.
    The time has now come to be kind to her.
14 Your servants love even her stones.
    They even care about her dust.
15 Nations will fear the name of the Lord.
    All the kings on earth will honor him.
16 The Lord will rebuild Jerusalem.
    There his glory will be seen.
17 He will answer the prayers of the needy.
    He will not reject their prayers.

18 Write these things for the future.
    Then people who are not yet born will praise the Lord.
19 The Lord looked down from his holy place above.
    From heaven he looked down at the earth.
20 He heard the moans of the prisoners.
    And he freed those sentenced to die.
21 The name of the Lord will be heard in Jerusalem.
    His praise will be heard in Jerusalem.
22 People will come together.
    Kingdoms will serve the Lord.

23 God has made me tired of living.
    He has cut short my life.
24 So I said, “My God, do not take me in the middle of my life.
    Your years go on and on.
25 In the beginning you made the earth.
    And your hands made the skies.
26 They will be destroyed, but you will remain.
    They will all wear out like clothes.
And, like clothes, you will change them.
    And they will be thrown away.
27 But you never change.
    And your life will never end.
28 Our children will live in your presence.
    And their children will remain with you.”

Psalm 107:1-32

Book 5

Psalms 107—150

God Saves from Many Dangers

107 Thank the Lord because he is good.
    His love continues forever.
That is what the people the Lord has saved should say.
    They are the ones he has saved from the enemy.
He has gathered them from other lands,
    from east and west, north and south.

Some people had wandered in the desert lands.
    They found no city to live in.
They were hungry and thirsty.
    They were discouraged.
In their misery they cried out to the Lord.
    And he saved them from their troubles.
He led them on a straight road
    to a city where they could live.
Let them give thanks to the Lord for his love
    and for the miracles he does for people.
He satisfies the thirsty.
    He fills up the hungry.

10 Some sat in gloom and darkness.
    They were prisoners suffering in chains.
11 They had turned against the words of God.
    They had refused the advice of God Most High.
12 So he broke their pride by hard work.
    They stumbled, and no one helped.
13 In their misery they cried out to the Lord.
    And he saved them from their troubles.
14 He brought them out of their gloom and darkness.
    He broke their chains.
15 Let them give thanks to the Lord for his love
    and for the miracles he does for people.
16 He breaks down bronze gates.
    And he cuts apart iron bars.

17 Some became fools who turned against God.
    They suffered for the evil they did.
18 They refused to eat anything.
    So they almost died.
19 In their misery they cried out to the Lord.
    And he saved them from their troubles.
20 God gave the command and healed them.
    So they were saved from dying.
21 Let them give thanks to the Lord for his love
    and for the miracles he does for people.
22 Let them offer sacrifices to thank him.
    With joy they should tell what he has done.

23 Others went out to sea in ships.
    They did business on the great oceans.
24 They saw what the Lord could do.
    They saw the miracles he did.
25 He spoke, and a storm came up.
    It blew up high waves.
26 The ships tossed as high as the sky and fell low in the waves.
    The storm was so bad the men lost their courage.
27 They stumbled and fell like men who were drunk.
    They did not know what to do.
28 In their misery they cried out to the Lord.
    And he saved them from their troubles.
29 He made the storm be still.
    He calmed the waves.
30 They were happy that it was quiet.
    And God guided them to the port they wanted.
31 Let them give thanks to the Lord for his love
    and for the miracles he does for people.
32 Let them praise his greatness in the meeting of the people.
    They should praise him in the meeting of the elders.

Hosea 10

Israel Will Pay for Sin

10 Israel is like a vine
    that produced plenty of fruit.
As the people became richer,
    they built more altars for idols.
As their land became better,
    they put up better stone pillars to honor false gods.
Their heart was false.
    Now they must pay for their guilt.
The Lord will break down their altars.
    He will destroy their holy stone pillars.

Then the Israelites will say, “We have no king,
    because we didn’t honor the Lord.
But even if we had one,
    he couldn’t do anything for us.”
They make many false promises.
    They make agreements they don’t keep.
So people sue each other in court.
    They are like poisonous weeds growing in a plowed field.
The people from Israel are worried about
    the calf-shaped idol at Beth Aven.
The people and the priests will cry
    because their glorious idol is gone.
It will be carried off as a payment that was demanded
    to the great king of Assyria.
Israel will be disgraced.
    The people will be ashamed of trusting that idol.
The king of Israel will be carried off
    like a chip of wood floating on the water.
The places of worship at Beth Aven will be destroyed.
    They are where Israel sins.
Thorns and weeds will grow up
    and cover their altars.
Then they will say to the mountains, “Cover us!”
    And they will say to the hills, “Fall on us!”

“Israel, you have sinned since the time of Gibeah.[a]
    The people there have continued sinning.
But war will surely overwhelm them,
    because of the evil they have done there.
10 When I am ready,
    I will come to punish them.
Armies will come together against them.
    They will be punished for their many sins.
11 Israel is like a well-trained young cow
    that likes to thresh grain.
But I will put a yoke on her neck.
    I will make Israel work hard in the field.
Judah will plow.
    Israel will break up the ground.
12 I said, ‘Break new ground.
    Plant what is right.
Then you will harvest good things
    from your loyalty to me.
It is time for you to turn back to me, the Lord.
    Do it until I come and pour out my goodness on you.’
13 But you have planted evil.
    So you have harvested trouble.
You have trusted in your own power
    and your many soldiers.
    Now you must live with the result of your lies.
14 So your armies will hear the noise of battle.
    And all your strong, walled cities will be destroyed.
It will be like the time King Shalman
    destroyed Beth Arbel in battle.
    Mothers and children were crushed to the ground together.
15 The same will happen to you, people of Bethel,
    because you did so much evil.
When that time comes,
    the king of Israel will die.

Acts 21:37-22:16

37 The soldiers were about to take Paul into the army building. But he spoke to the commander, “May I say something to you?”

The commander said, “Do you speak Greek? 38 I thought you were the Egyptian who started some trouble against the government not long ago. He led 4,000 killers out to the desert.”

39 Paul said, “No, I am a Jew from Tarsus in the country of Cilicia. I am a citizen of that important city. Please, let me speak to the people.”

40 The commander gave permission, so Paul stood on the steps. He waved with his hand so that the people would be quiet. When there was silence, Paul spoke to them in the Jewish language.[a]

Paul Speaks to the People

22 Paul said, “Brothers and fathers, listen to me! I will make my defense to you.” When the Jews heard him speaking the Jewish language,[b] they became very quiet. Paul said, “I am a Jew. I was born in Tarsus in the country of Cilicia. I grew up in this city. I was a student of Gamaliel.[c] He carefully taught me everything about the law of our ancestors. I was very serious about serving God, just as are all of you here today. I hurt the people who followed the Way of Jesus. Some of them were even killed. I arrested men and women and put them in jail. The high priest and the whole council of Jewish elders can tell you that this is true. These leaders gave me letters to the Jewish brothers in Damascus. So I was going there to arrest these people and bring them back to Jerusalem to be punished.

“But something happened to me on my way to Damascus. It was about noon when I came near Damascus. Suddenly a bright light from heaven flashed all around me. I fell to the ground and heard a voice saying, ‘Saul, Saul, why are you doing things against me?’ I asked, ‘Who are you, Lord?’ The voice said, ‘I am Jesus from Nazareth. I am the One you are trying to hurt.’ The men who were with me did not understand the voice. But they saw the light. 10 I said, ‘What shall I do, Lord?’ The Lord answered, ‘Get up and go to Damascus. There you will be told about all the things I have planned for you to do.’ 11 I could not see, because the bright light had made me blind. So the men led me into Damascus.

12 “There a man named Ananias came to me. He was a religious man; he obeyed the law of Moses. All the Jews who lived there respected him. 13 Ananias came to me, stood by me, and said, ‘Brother Saul, see again!’ Immediately I was able to see him. 14 Ananias told me, ‘The God of our fathers chose you long ago. He chose you to know his plan. He chose you to see the Righteous One and to hear words from him. 15 You will be his witness to all people. You will tell them about the things you have seen and heard. 16 Now, why wait any longer? Get up, be baptized, and wash your sins away. Do this, trusting in him to save you.’

Luke 6:12-26

Jesus Chooses His Apostles

12 At that time Jesus went off to a mountain to pray. He stayed there all night, praying to God. 13 The next morning, Jesus called his followers to him. He chose 12 of them, whom he named “apostles.” They were 14 Simon (Jesus named him Peter) and Andrew, Peter’s brother; James and John, Philip and Bartholomew; 15 Matthew, Thomas, James son of Alphaeus, and Simon (called the Zealot), 16 Judas son of James and Judas Iscariot. This Judas was the one who gave Jesus to his enemies.

Jesus Teaches and Heals

17 Jesus and the apostles came down from the mountain. Jesus stood on level ground where there was a large group of his followers. Also, there were many people from all around Judea, Jerusalem, and the seacoast cities of Tyre and Sidon. 18 They all came to hear Jesus teach and to be healed of their sicknesses. He healed those who were troubled by evil spirits. 19 All the people were trying to touch Jesus, because power was coming from him and healing them all!

20 Jesus looked at his followers and said,

“Poor people, you are happy,
    because God’s kingdom belongs to you.
21 You people who are now hungry are happy,
    because you will be satisfied.
You people who are now crying are happy,
    because you will laugh with joy.

22 “You are happy when people hate you and are cruel to you. You are happy when they say that you are evil because you belong to the Son of Man. 23 At that time be full of joy, because you have a great reward in heaven. Their fathers were cruel to the prophets in the same way these people are cruel to you.

24 “But how terrible it will be for you who are rich,
    because you have had your easy life.
25 How terrible it will be for you who are full now,
    because you will be hungry.
How terrible it will be for you who are laughing now,
    because you will be sad and cry.

26 “How terrible when all people say only good things about you. Their fathers always said good things about the false prophets.

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

The Holy Bible, International Children’s Bible® Copyright© 1986, 1988, 1999, 2015 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission.