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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 119:49-72

49 Remember your promise to me, your servant;
    it gives me hope.
50 When I suffer, this comforts me:
    Your promise gives me life.
51 Proud people always make fun of me,
    but I do not reject your teachings.
52 I remember your laws from long ago,
    and they comfort me, Lord.
53 I become angry with wicked people
    who do not keep your teachings.
54 I sing about your demands
    wherever I live.
55 Lord, I remember you at night,
    and I will obey your teachings.
56 This is what I do:
    I follow your orders.

57 Lord, you are my share in life;
    I have promised to obey your words.
58 I prayed to you with all my heart.
    Have mercy on me as you have promised.
59 I thought about my life,
    and I decided to follow your rules.
60 I hurried and did not wait
    to obey your commands.
61 Wicked people have tied me up,
    but I have not forgotten your teachings.
62 In the middle of the night, I get up to thank you
    because your laws are right.
63 I am a friend to everyone who fears you,
    to anyone who obeys your orders.
64 Lord, your love fills the earth.
    Teach me your demands.

65 You have done good things for your servant,
    as you have promised, Lord.
66 Teach me wisdom and knowledge
    because I trust your commands.
67 Before I suffered, I did wrong,
    but now I obey your word.
68 You are good, and you do what is good.
    Teach me your demands.
69 Proud people have made up lies about me,
    but I will follow your orders with all my heart.
70 Those people have no feelings,
    but I love your teachings.
71 It was good for me to suffer
    so I would learn your demands.
72 Your teachings are worth more to me
    than thousands of pieces of gold and silver.

Psalm 49

Trusting Money Is Foolish

For the director of music. A psalm of the sons of Korah.

49 Listen to this, all you nations;
    listen, all you who live on earth.
Listen, both great and small,
    rich and poor together.
What I say is wise,
    and my heart speaks with understanding.
I will pay attention to a wise saying;
    I will explain my riddle on the harp.

Why should I be afraid of bad days?
    Why should I fear when evil people surround me?
They trust in their money
    and brag about their riches.
No one can buy back the life of another.
    No one can pay God for his own life,
because the price of a life is high.
    No payment is ever enough.
Do people live forever?
    Don’t they all face death?

10 See, even wise people die.
    Fools and stupid people also die
    and leave their wealth to others.
11 Their graves will always be their homes.
    They will live there from now on,
    even though they named places after themselves.
12 Even rich people do not live forever;
    like the animals, people die.

13 This is what will happen to those who trust in themselves
    and to their followers who believe them. Selah
14 Like sheep, they must die,
    and death will be their shepherd.
Honest people will rule over them in the morning,
    and their bodies will rot in a grave far from home.
15 But God will save my life
    and will take me from the grave. Selah

16 Don’t be afraid of rich people
    because their houses are more beautiful.
17 They don’t take anything to the grave;
    their wealth won’t go down with them.
18 Even though they were praised when they were alive—
    and people may praise you when you succeed—
19 they will go to where their ancestors are.
    They will never see light again.
20 Rich people with no understanding
    are just like animals that die.

Psalm 53

The Unbelieving Fool

For the director of music. By mahalath. A maskil of David.

53 Fools say to themselves,
    “There is no God.”
Fools are evil and do terrible things;
    none of them does anything good.

God looked down from heaven on all people
    to see if anyone was wise,
    if anyone was looking to God for help.
But all have turned away.
    Together, everyone has become evil;
    none of them does anything good.
    Not a single person.

Don’t the wicked understand?
    They destroy my people as if they were eating bread.
    They do not ask God for help.
The wicked are filled with terror
    where there had been nothing to fear.
    God will scatter the bones of your enemies.
You will defeat them,
    because God has rejected them.

I pray that victory will come to Israel from Mount Zion!
    May God bring them back.
    Then the people of Jacob will rejoice,
    and the people of Israel will be glad.

Ezra 6

The Order of Darius

So King Darius gave an order to search the records kept in the treasury in Babylon. A scroll was found in Ecbatana, the capital city of Media. This is what was written on it:

Note:

King Cyrus gave an order about the Temple of God in Jerusalem in the first year he was king. This was the order:

“Let the Temple be rebuilt as a place to present sacrifices. Let its foundations be laid; it should be ninety feet high and ninety feet wide. It must have three layers of large stones and then one layer of timbers. The costs should be paid from the king’s treasury. The gold and silver utensils from the Temple of God should be put back in their places. Nebuchadnezzar took them from the Temple in Jerusalem and brought them to Babylon, but they are to be put back in the Temple of God in Jerusalem.”

Now then, Tattenai, governor of Trans-Euphrates, Shethar-Bozenai, and all the officers of that area, stay away from there. Do not bother the work on that Temple of God. Let the governor of the Jewish people and the Jewish elders rebuild this Temple where it was before.

Also, I order you to do this for those elders of the Jewish people who are building this Temple: The cost of the building is to be fully paid from the royal treasury, from taxes collected from Trans-Euphrates. Do this so the work will not stop. Give those people anything they need—young bulls, male sheep, or lambs for burnt offerings to the God of heaven, or wheat, salt, wine, or olive oil. Give the priests in Jerusalem anything they ask for every day without fail. 10 Then they may offer sacrifices pleasing to the God of heaven, and they may pray for the life of the king and his sons.

11 Also, I give this order: If anyone changes this order, a wood beam is to be pulled from his house and driven through his body. Because of his crime, make his house a pile of ruins. 12 God has chosen Jerusalem as the place he is to be worshiped. May he punish any king or person who tries to change this order and destroy this Temple.

I, Darius, have given this order. Let it be obeyed quickly and carefully.

Completion of the Temple

13 So, Tattenai, the governor of Trans-Euphrates, Shethar-Bozenai, and their fellow workers carried out King Darius’ order quickly and carefully. 14 The Jewish elders continued to build and were successful because of the preaching of Haggai the prophet and Zechariah, a descendant of Iddo. They finished building the Temple as the God of Israel had commanded and as kings Cyrus, Darius, and Artaxerxes of Persia had ordered. 15 The Temple was finished on the third day of the month of Adar in the sixth year Darius was king.

16 Then the people of Israel celebrated and gave the Temple to God to honor him. Everybody was happy: the priests, the Levites, and the rest of the Jewish people who had returned from captivity. 17 They gave the Temple to God by offering a hundred bulls, two hundred male sheep, and four hundred lambs as sacrifices. And as an offering to forgive the sins of all Israel, they offered twelve male goats, one goat for each tribe in Israel. 18 Then they put the priests and the Levites into their separate groups. Each group had a certain time to serve God in the Temple at Jerusalem as it is written in the Book of Moses.

The Passover Is Celebrated

19 The Jewish people who returned from captivity celebrated the Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month. 20 The priests and Levites had made themselves clean. Then the Levites killed the Passover lambs for all the people who had returned from captivity, for their relatives the priests, and for themselves. 21 So all the people of Israel who returned from captivity ate the Passover lamb. So did the people who had given up the unclean ways of their non-Jewish neighbors in order to worship the Lord, the God of Israel. 22 For seven days they celebrated the Feast of Unleavened Bread in a very joyful way. The Lord had made them happy by changing the mind of the king of Assyria so that he helped them in the work on the Temple of the God of Israel.

Revelation 5:1-10

Then I saw a scroll in the right hand of the One sitting on the throne. The scroll had writing on both sides and was kept closed with seven seals. And I saw a powerful angel calling in a loud voice, “Who is worthy to break the seals and open the scroll?” But there was no one in heaven or on earth or under the earth who could open the scroll or look inside it. I cried bitterly because there was no one who was worthy to open the scroll or look inside. But one of the elders said to me, “Do not cry! The Lion[a] from the tribe of Judah, David’s descendant, has won the victory so that he is able to open the scroll and its seven seals.”

Then I saw a Lamb standing in the center of the throne and in the middle of the four living creatures and the elders. The Lamb looked as if he had been killed. He had seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven spirits of God that were sent into all the world. The Lamb came and took the scroll from the right hand of the One sitting on the throne. When he took the scroll, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders bowed down before the Lamb. Each one of them had a harp and golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of God’s holy people. And they all sang a new song to the Lamb:

“You are worthy to take the scroll
    and to open its seals,
because you were killed,
    and with the blood of your death you bought people for God
    from every tribe, language, people, and nation.
10 You made them to be a kingdom of priests for our God,
    and they will rule on the earth.”

Matthew 13:10-17

Why Jesus Used Stories to Teach

10 The followers came to Jesus and asked, “Why do you use stories to teach the people?”

11 Jesus answered, “You have been chosen to know the secrets about the kingdom of heaven, but others cannot know these secrets. 12 Those who have understanding will be given more, and they will have all they need. But those who do not have understanding, even what they have will be taken away from them. 13 This is why I use stories to teach the people: They see, but they don’t really see. They hear, but they don’t really hear or understand. 14 So they show that the things Isaiah said about them are true:

‘You will listen and listen, but you will not understand.
    You will look and look, but you will not learn.
15 For the minds of these people have become stubborn.
    They do not hear with their ears,
    and they have closed their eyes.
Otherwise they might really understand
    what they see with their eyes
    and hear with their ears.
They might really understand in their minds
    and come back to me and be healed.’ Isaiah 6:9–10

16 But you are blessed, because you see with your eyes and hear with your ears. 17 I tell you the truth, many prophets and good people wanted to see the things that you now see, but they did not see them. And they wanted to hear the things that you now hear, but they did not hear them.

New Century Version (NCV)

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