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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
New Century Version (NCV)
Version
Psalm 140

A Prayer for Protection

For the director of music. A psalm of David.

140 Lord, rescue me from evil people;
    protect me from cruel people
who make evil plans,
    who always start fights.
They make their tongues sharp as a snake’s;
    their words are like snake poison. Selah

Lord, guard me from the power of wicked people;
    protect me from cruel people
    who plan to trip me up.
The proud hid a trap for me.
    They spread out a net beside the road;
    they set traps for me. Selah

I said to the Lord, “You are my God.”
    Lord, listen to my prayer for help.
Lord God, my mighty savior,
    you protect me in battle.
Lord, do not give the wicked what they want.
    Don’t let their plans succeed,
    or they will become proud. Selah

Those around me have planned trouble.
    Now let it come to them.
10 Let burning coals fall on them.
    Throw them into the fire
    or into pits from which they cannot escape.
11 Don’t let liars settle in the land.
    Let evil quickly hunt down cruel people.

12 I know the Lord will get justice for the poor
    and will defend the needy in court.
13 Good people will praise his name;
    honest people will live in his presence.

Psalm 142

A Prayer for Safety

A maskil of David when he was in the cave. A prayer.

142 I cry out to the Lord;
    I pray to the Lord for mercy.
I pour out my problems to him;
    I tell him my troubles.
When I am afraid,
    you, Lord, know the way out.
In the path where I walk,
    a trap is hidden for me.
Look around me and see.
    No one cares about me.
I have no place of safety;
    no one cares if I live.

Lord, I cry out to you.
    I say, “You are my protection.
    You are all I want in this life.”
Listen to my cry,
    because I am helpless.
Save me from those who are chasing me,
    because they are too strong for me.
Free me from my prison,
    and then I will praise your name.
Then good people will surround me,
    because you have taken care of me.

Psalm 141

A Prayer Not to Sin

A psalm of David.

141 Lord, I call to you. Come quickly.
    Listen to me when I call to you.
Let my prayer be like incense placed before you,
    and my praise like the evening sacrifice.

Lord, help me control my tongue;
    help me be careful about what I say.
Take away my desire to do evil
    or to join others in doing wrong.
Don’t let me eat tasty food
    with those who do evil.

If a good person punished me, that would be kind.
    If he corrected me, that would be like perfumed oil on my head.
    I shouldn’t refuse it.
But I pray against those who do evil.
Let their leaders be thrown down the cliffs.
    Then people will know that I have spoken correctly:
“The ground is plowed and broken up.
    In the same way, our bones have been scattered at the grave.”

God, I look to you for help.
    I trust in you, Lord. Don’t let me die.
Protect me from the traps they set for me
    and from the net that evil people have spread.
10 Let the wicked fall into their own nets,
    but let me pass by safely.

Psalm 143

A Prayer Not to Be Killed

A psalm of David.

143 Lord, hear my prayer;
    listen to my cry for mercy.
Answer me
    because you are loyal and good.
Don’t judge me, your servant,
    because no one alive is right before you.
My enemies are chasing me;
    they crushed me to the ground.
They made me live in darkness
    like those long dead.
I am afraid;
    my courage is gone.

I remember what happened long ago;
    I consider everything you have done.
    I think about all you have made.
I lift my hands to you in prayer.
    As a dry land needs rain, I thirst for you. Selah

Lord, answer me quickly,
    because I am getting weak.
Don’t turn away from me,
    or I will be like those who are dead.
Tell me in the morning about your love,
    because I trust you.
Show me what I should do,
    because my prayers go up to you.
Lord, save me from my enemies;
    I hide in you.
10 Teach me to do what you want,
    because you are my God.
Let your good Spirit
    lead me on level ground.

11 Lord, let me live
    so people will praise you.
In your goodness
    save me from my troubles.
12 In your love defeat my enemies.
    Destroy all those who trouble me,
    because I am your servant.

Micah 3:9-4:5

Leaders of Jacob and rulers of Israel,
    listen to me,
you who hate fairness
    and twist what is right.
10 You build Jerusalem by murdering people;
    you build it with evil.
11 Its judges take money
    to decide who wins in court.
Its priests only teach for pay,
    and its prophets only look into the future when they get paid.
But they lean on the Lord and say,
    “The Lord is here with us,
    so nothing bad will happen to us.”
12 Because of you,
    Jerusalem will be plowed like a field.
The city will become a pile of rocks,
    and the hill on which the Temple stands will be covered with bushes.

The Mountain of the Lord

In the last days
    the mountain on which the Lord’s Temple stands
    will become the most important of all mountains.
It will be raised above the hills,
    and people from other nations will come streaming to it.
Many nations will come and say,
    “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord,
    to the Temple of the God of Jacob,
so that he can teach us his ways,
    and we can obey his teachings.”
His teachings will go out from Jerusalem,
    the word of the Lord from that city.
The Lord will judge many nations;
    he will make decisions about strong nations that are far away.
They will hammer their swords into plow blades
    and their spears into hooks for trimming trees.
Nations will no longer raise swords against other nations;
    they will not train for war anymore.
Everyone will sit under his own vine and fig tree,
    and no one will make him afraid,
    because the Lord All-Powerful has said it.
All other nations may follow their own gods,
    but we will follow the Lord our God forever and ever.

Acts 24:24-25:12

Paul Speaks to Felix and His Wife

24 After some days Felix came with his wife, Drusilla, who was Jewish, and asked for Paul to be brought to him. He listened to Paul talk about believing in Christ Jesus. 25 But Felix became afraid when Paul spoke about living right, self-control, and the time when God will judge the world. He said, “Go away now. When I have more time, I will call for you.” 26 At the same time Felix hoped that Paul would give him some money, so he often sent for Paul and talked with him.

27 But after two years, Felix was replaced by Porcius Festus as governor. But Felix had left Paul in prison to please the Jews.

Paul Asks to See Caesar

25 Three days after Festus became governor, he went from Caesarea to Jerusalem. There the leading priests and the important leaders made charges against Paul before Festus. They asked Festus to do them a favor. They wanted him to send Paul back to Jerusalem, because they had a plan to kill him on the way. But Festus answered that Paul would be kept in Caesarea and that he himself was returning there soon. He said, “Some of your leaders should go with me. They can accuse the man there in Caesarea, if he has really done something wrong.”

Festus stayed in Jerusalem another eight or ten days and then went back to Caesarea. The next day he told the soldiers to bring Paul before him. Festus was seated on the judge’s seat when Paul came into the room. The people who had come from Jerusalem stood around him, making serious charges against him, which they could not prove. This is what Paul said to defend himself: “I have done nothing wrong against the law, against the Temple, or against Caesar.”

But Festus wanted to please the people. So he asked Paul, “Do you want to go to Jerusalem for me to judge you there on these charges?”

10 Paul said, “I am standing at Caesar’s judgment seat now, where I should be judged. I have done nothing wrong to them; you know this is true. 11 If I have done something wrong and the law says I must die, I do not ask to be saved from death. But if these charges are not true, then no one can give me to them. I want Caesar to hear my case!”

12 Festus talked about this with his advisers. Then he said, “You have asked to see Caesar, so you will go to Caesar!”

Luke 8:1-15

The Group with Jesus

After this, while Jesus was traveling through some cities and small towns, he preached and told the Good News about God’s kingdom. The twelve apostles were with him, and also some women who had been healed of sicknesses and evil spirits: Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out; Joanna, the wife of Cuza (the manager of Herod’s house); Susanna; and many others. These women used their own money to help Jesus and his apostles.

A Story About Planting Seed

When a great crowd was gathered, and people were coming to Jesus from every town, he told them this story:

“A farmer went out to plant his seed. While he was planting, some seed fell by the road. People walked on the seed, and the birds ate it up. Some seed fell on rock, and when it began to grow, it died because it had no water. Some seed fell among thorny weeds, but the weeds grew up with it and choked the good plants. And some seed fell on good ground and grew and made a hundred times more.”

As Jesus finished the story, he called out, “Let those with ears use them and listen!”

Jesus’ followers asked him what this story meant.

10 Jesus said, “You have been chosen to know the secrets about the kingdom of God. But I use stories to speak to other people so that:

‘They will look, but they may not see.
    They will listen, but they may not understand.’ Isaiah 6:9

11 “This is what the story means: The seed is God’s message. 12 The seed that fell beside the road is like the people who hear God’s teaching, but the devil comes and takes it away from them so they cannot believe it and be saved. 13 The seed that fell on rock is like those who hear God’s teaching and accept it gladly, but they don’t allow the teaching to go deep into their lives. They believe for a while, but when trouble comes, they give up. 14 The seed that fell among the thorny weeds is like those who hear God’s teaching, but they let the worries, riches, and pleasures of this life keep them from growing and producing good fruit. 15 And the seed that fell on the good ground is like those who hear God’s teaching with good, honest hearts and obey it and patiently produce good fruit.

New Century Version (NCV)

The Holy Bible, New Century Version®. Copyright © 2005 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.