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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 38

A Prayer in Time of Sickness

A song of David to remember.

38 Lord, don’t correct me when you are angry.
    Don’t punish me when you are very angry.
Your arrows have wounded me.
    Your hand has come down on me.
My body is sick from your punishment.
    Even my bones are not healthy because of my sin.
My guilt has overwhelmed me.
    Like a load it weighs me down.

My sores stink and become infected
    because I was foolish.
I am bent over and bowed down.
    I am sad all day long.
I am burning with fever.
    My whole body is sore.
I am weak and faint.
    I moan from the pain I feel.

Lord, you know everything I want.
    My cries are not hidden from you.
10 My heart pounds, and my strength is gone.
    I am losing my sight.
11 Because of my wounds, my friends and neighbors leave me alone.
    My relatives stay far away.
12 Some people set traps to kill me.
    Those who want to hurt me plan trouble.
    All day long they think up lies.

13 I am like a deaf man; I cannot hear.
    Like a mute, I cannot speak.
14 I am like a person who does not hear.
    I have no answer to give.
15 I trust you, Lord.
    You will answer, my God and Lord.
16 I said, “Don’t let them laugh at me.
    Don’t let them brag when I am defeated.”
17 I am about to die.
    I cannot forget my pain.
18 I confess my guilt.
    I am troubled by my sin.
19 My enemies are strong and healthy.
    Many people hate me for no reason.
20 They repay me with evil for the good I did.
    They lie about me because I try to do good.

21 Lord, don’t leave me.
    My God, don’t go away.
22 Quickly come and help me,
    my Lord and Savior.

Psalm 119:25-48

25 I am about to die.
    Give me life, as you have promised.
26 I told you about my life, and you answered me.
    Teach me your demands.
27 Help me understand your orders.
    Then I will think about your miracles.
28 I am sad and tired.
    Make me strong again as you have promised.
29 Don’t let me be dishonest.
    Be kind to me by helping me obey your teachings.
30 I have chosen to obey you.
    I have obeyed your laws.
31 I hold on to your rules.
    Lord, do not let me be disgraced.
32 I will obey your commands
    because you have made me happy.

33 Lord, teach me your demands.
    Then I will obey them until the end.
34 Help me understand, so I can obey your teachings.
    I will obey them with all my heart.
35 Help me obey your commands
    because that makes me happy.
36 Help me want to obey your rules
    instead of selfishly wanting riches.
37 Keep me from looking at worthless things.
    Let me live by your word.
38 Keep your promise to me, your servant,
    so you will be feared.
39 Take away the shame I fear.
    Your laws are good.
40 How I want to follow your orders.
    Give me life because of your goodness.

41 Lord, show me your love.
    Save me as you have promised.
42 Then I will have an answer for people who insult me.
    I trust what you say.
43 Never keep me from speaking your truth.
    I depend on your fair laws.
44 I will obey your teachings
    forever and ever.
45 So I will live in freedom
    because I want to follow your orders.
46 I will discuss your rules with kings.
    And I will not be ashamed.
47 I enjoy obeying your commands.
    I love them.
48 I praise your commands, which I love.
    And I think about your demands.

Lamentations 2:8-15

The Lord planned to destroy
    the wall around Jerusalem.
He marked the wall off with a measuring line.
    He did not stop himself from destroying it.
He made the walls and defenses sad.
    Together they have fallen.

Jerusalem’s gates have fallen to the ground.
    He destroyed and smashed the bars of the gates.
Her king and her princes are sent away among the nations.
    The teaching of the Lord has stopped.
The prophets have not had
    any visions from the Lord.

10 The elders of Jerusalem
    sit on the ground and are silent.
They pour dust on their heads
    and put on rough cloth to show how sad they are.
The young women of Jerusalem
    bow their heads to the ground in sorrow.

11 My eyes are weak from crying.
    I am troubled.
I feel as if I have been poured out on the ground
    because my people have been destroyed.
Children and babies are fainting
    in the streets of the city.

12 They say to their mothers,
    “Where is some bread and wine?”
They faint like wounded soldiers
    in the streets of the city.
    They die in their mothers’ arms.

13 What can I say about you, Jerusalem?
    What can I compare you to?
What can I say you are like?
    How can I comfort you, Jerusalem?
Your ruin is as big as the sea.
    No one can heal you.

14 Your prophets saw visions about you.
    But they were false and worth nothing.
They did not expose your sins.
    They did not keep you from being captured.
The messages they preached to you were false.
    They fooled you.

15 All who pass by on the road
    clap their hands at you.
They make fun and shake their heads
    at Jerusalem.
They ask, “Is this the city that people called
    the most beautiful city,
    the happiest city on earth?”

1 Corinthians 15:51-58

51 But listen, I tell you this secret: We will not all die, but we will all be changed. 52 It will only take a second. We will be changed as quickly as an eye blinks. This will happen when the last trumpet sounds. The trumpet will sound and those who have died will be raised to live forever. And we will all be changed. 53 This body that will ruin must clothe itself with something that will never ruin. And this body that dies must clothe itself with something that will never die. 54 So this body that ruins will clothe itself with that which never ruins. And this body that dies will clothe itself with that which never dies. When this happens, then this Scripture will be made true:

“Death is destroyed forever in victory.” Isaiah 25:8
55 “Death, where is your victory?
    Death, where is your power to hurt?” Hosea 13:14

56 Death’s power to hurt is sin. The power of sin is the law. 57 But we thank God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

58 So my dear brothers, stand strong. Do not let anything move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord. You know that your work in the Lord is never wasted.

Matthew 12:1-14

Jesus Is Lord of the Sabbath

12 About that same time, Jesus was walking through some fields of grain on a Sabbath day. His followers were with him, and they were hungry. So they began to pick the grain and eat it. The Pharisees saw this, and they said to Jesus, “Look! Your followers are doing something that is against the Jewish law to do on the Sabbath day.”

Jesus answered, “Have you not read what David did when he and the people with him were hungry? David went into God’s house. He and those with him ate the bread that was made holy for God. It was against the law for them to eat that bread. Only the priests were allowed to eat it. And have you not read in the law of Moses that on every Sabbath day the priests in the Temple break this law about the Sabbath day? But the priests are not wrong for doing that. I tell you that there is something here that is greater than the Temple. The Scripture says, ‘I want faithful love more than I want animal sacrifices.’[a] You don’t really know what those words mean. If you understood them, you would not judge those who have done nothing wrong.

“The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath day.”

Jesus Heals a Man’s Crippled Hand

Jesus left there and went into their synagogue. 10 In the synagogue, there was a man with a crippled hand. Some Jews there were looking for a reason to accuse Jesus of doing wrong. So they asked him, “Is it right to heal on the Sabbath day?”[b]

11 Jesus answered, “If any of you has a sheep, and it falls into a ditch on the Sabbath day, then you will take the sheep and help it out of the ditch. 12 Surely a man is more important than a sheep. So the law of Moses allows people to do good things on the Sabbath day.”

13 Then Jesus said to the man with the crippled hand, “Let me see your hand.” The man put his hand out, and the hand became well again, the same as the other hand. 14 But the Pharisees left and made plans to kill Jesus.

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

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