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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
The Voice (VOICE)
Version
Psalm 119:145-176

Qoph

145 I called to You wholeheartedly: “Answer me, O Eternal One!”
    I will respect, I will follow Your statutes.
146 I cried out to You: “Rescue me,
    and I will live according to Your decrees.”
147 I wake before the dawn and call for help;
    I hope in Your words.
148 My eyes do not shut before each watch of the night
    so that I can fix my mind on Your word.
149 Listen to my voice, in keeping with Your unfailing love.
    Preserve my life, O Eternal One, according to Your just rulings.
150 Those who wish me harm are moving closer to me;
    they are far away from Your teaching.
151 But You are near me, O Eternal One,
    and all You have commanded is true.
152 I learned a long time ago
    that You established Your decrees to last forever.

Resh

153 Give attention to my misery and rescue me
    because I have not forgotten Your teaching.
154 Fight for me, and set me free;
    give me life in keeping with Your promise.
155 Salvation is far from the wicked
    because they do not live in pursuit of Your precepts.
156 Your mercies are tender and great, O Eternal One;
    grant me life in keeping with Your ordinances.
157 I have many oppressors and foes;
    still I do not swerve from Your decrees.
158 I observe the faithless and detest them
    because they turn away from Your word.
159 Reflect, O God, on how I love Your precepts;
    give me life, O Eternal One, in keeping with Your unfailing love.
160 The entirety of Your word is truth,
    and every one of Your right rulings will surely last forever.

Shin

161 Princes persecute me without reason,
    but my heart remains true and is awed by Your words.
162 I celebrate because of Your promise,
    like someone who discovers great treasure.
163 I despise and abhor lies,
    but I love Your law.
164 Seven times every day I praise You
    because of Your right rulings.
165 Those who love Your law have an abundance of peace,
    and nothing along their paths can cause them to stumble.
166 I wait for Your salvation, O Eternal One,
    and I live out Your commands.
167 My soul is faithful to Your decrees,
    and my love for them is extraordinary.
168 I live according to Your precepts and decrees
    because everything I do is right before Your eyes.

Tav

169 Let my cry come before You, O Eternal One.
    Grant me understanding in keeping with Your word.
170 Let my plea come before You;
    liberate me in keeping with Your word.
171 Praise will pour from my lips
    because You help me learn what You require.
172 My tongue will sing of Your word
    because every command of Yours is right.
173 Let Your hand be poised to help me
    because I have chosen to live by Your precepts.
174 I long for Your salvation, O Eternal One.
    Meanwhile, Your teaching brings me great joy.
175 Let my soul live on so that I may praise You,
    and let Your precepts guide me.
176 I have wandered down the wrong path like a lost sheep; come find me, Your servant,
    because I do not forget Your commands.

Psalm 128-130

Psalm 128

A song for those journeying to worship.

Those who stand in awe of the Eternal—
    who follow wherever He leads, committed in their hearts—experience His blessings!
God will use your hard work to provide you food.
    You will prosper in your labor, and it will go well for you.

Your wife will be like a healthy vine producing plenty of fruit,
    a spring of life in your home.
Your children will be like young olive shoots;
    you will watch them bud and bloom around your table.
Such are the blessings the Eternal lavishes
    on those who stand in awe of Him!

May the Eternal continue to pour out His love on you,
    showering down blessings from His holy mountain, Zion.
May you see Jerusalem prosper
    all your days.
May you have the privilege of seeing your grandchildren as they grow.
    May peace flourish in Israel!

Psalm 129

A song for those journeying to worship.

This is not the first time my enemies assaulted me;
    they have often attacked me since I was young.”
So let Israel now proclaim,
This is not the first time my enemies assaulted me;
    they have attacked me since I was young,
    and yet they have not been able to overpower me.
The plowers plowed over me;
    they plowed their furrows deep and long down my back.”
The Eternal is just.
    He’s severed the bindings of the wicked so they can’t hurt me anymore.
May all who despise Zion
    hang their heads in shame.
    May all who despise Zion recoil and run away.
Let them grow like grass upon rooftops
    that withers and dies in the sun long before it has time to grow,
Unfit to be harvested by the worker,
    not worthy of the effort to carry off to the binder.
Unwanted, uncared for—no passersby to greet them, no one to say,
    “May the favor of the Eternal be upon you;
We bless you in His name.”

Psalm 130

A song for those journeying to worship.

From the depths of disaster I appeal to You, O Eternal One:
Lord, hear my cry!
    Attune Your ears to my humble prayer!

If You, Eternal One, recorded each offense,
    Lord, who on earth could stand innocent?
But with You forgiveness exists;
    that’s why true respect of You might flow.

So I wait for the Eternal—my soul awaits rescue
    and I put my hope in His transforming word.
My soul waits for the Lord to break into the world
    more than night watchmen expect the break of day,
    even more than night watchmen expect the break of day.

O Israel, ground your hope in the Eternal.
    For in the Eternal lives the most loyal love,
    and with Him comes the most abundant redemption.
He will ransom Israel
    from all the sinful acts that stole you away.

2 Samuel 18:19-23

19 After Absalom’s death, Ahimaaz, Zadok’s son, spoke to Joab.

Ahimaaz: Let me hurry to the king with the good news that the Eternal One has given him victory over his enemies.

Joab: 20 You’re not going to carry news today. Maybe some other day, but not today, for today the news that matters most is that the king’s son is dead.

21 (to the Cushite) Go and tell the king what you have seen.

The Cushite bowed in obedience to Joab, then he began running to bring the news to David.

Ahimaaz: 22 Whatever happens, I want to run after the Cushite.

Joab: Why would you want to follow, even though you have nothing to gain?

Ahimaaz: 23 Regardless of what happens, I am going to run.

Joab: OK, then. Run.

Ahimaaz ran, and going by way of the plain, he outran the Cushite.

Acts 23:23-35

23 Then he called for two officers.

Commandant: At nine o’clock tonight, you will leave for Caesarea with 200 soldiers, 70 horsemen, and 200 spearmen. 24 Have a mount for Paul to ride, and conduct him safely to Felix the governor.

25 He wrote the following letter:

26 Commandant Claudius Lysias greets his excellency, Felix, Governor. 27 The accompanying prisoner was seized by Jews who were about to kill him. I learned he was a Roman citizen and intervened with the guard here to protect him. 28 I arranged for a hearing before their council 29 and learned that he was accused for reasons relating to their religious law, but that he has done nothing deserving imprisonment or execution. 30 I was informed that a group was planning to assassinate him, so I sent him to you immediately. I will require his accusers to present their complaint before you.

31 So the soldiers followed their orders and safely conducted Paul as far as Antipatris that night. 32-33 The next day, the horsemen conducted him on to Caesarea as the foot soldiers returned to the barracks. The horsemen delivered the letter and the prisoner to Felix who read the letter. 34 The only question Felix asked concerned the province of Paul’s birth. When he learned Paul was from Cilicia, 35 he said,

Felix: As soon as your accusers arrive I will hear your case.

He placed Paul under guard within Herod’s headquarters.

Mark 12:13-27

The leaders are stunned to learn they will face judgment themselves. It goes against everything they believe about themselves and about God.

13 Then some Pharisees and some of Herod’s supporters banded together to try to entrap Jesus. 14 They came to Him and complimented Him.

Pharisees: Teacher, we know You are truthful in what You say and that You don’t play favorites. You’re not worried about what anyone thinks of You, so You teach with total honesty what God would have us do. So tell us: is it lawful that we Jews should pay taxes to the Roman emperor or not? 15 Should we give or not?

Jesus (seeing through their ruse): Why do you test Me like this? Listen, bring Me a coin[a] so that I can take a look at it.

16 When they had brought it to Him, He asked them another question.

Jesus: Tell Me, whose picture is on this coin? And of whom does this inscription speak?

Pharisees: Caesar, of course.

Jesus: 17 Then give to the emperor what belongs to the emperor. And give to God what belongs to God.

They could not think of anything to say to His response.

Jesus turns the question back on them. It isn’t about taxes. It is about knowing and being faithful to the one true God.

18 Later a group of Sadducees, Jewish religious leaders who didn’t believe the dead would be resurrected, came to test Jesus.

Sadducees: 19 Teacher, the law of Moses tells us, “If a man’s brother dies, leaving a widow without sons, then the man should marry his sister-in-law and try to have children with her in his brother’s name.”[b]

20 Now here’s the situation: there were seven brothers. The oldest took a wife and left her a widow with no children. 21 So the next oldest married her, left her a widow, and again there were no children. So the next brother married her and died, and the next, and the next. 22 Finally all seven brothers had married her, but none of them had conceived children with her, and at last she died also.

23 Tell us then, in the resurrection [when humans rise from the dead],[c] whose wife will she be? For all seven of them married her.

Jesus: 24 You can’t see the truth because you don’t know the Scriptures well and because you don’t really believe that God is powerful. 25 The answer is this: when the dead rise, they won’t be married or given in marriage. They’ll be like the messengers in heaven, who are not united with one another in marriage. 26 But how can you fail to see the truth of resurrection? Don’t you remember in the Book of Moses how God talked to Moses out of a burning bush and what God said to him then? “I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.”[d] “I am,” God said. Not “I was.” 27 So God is not the God of the dead but of the living. You are sadly mistaken.

The Voice (VOICE)

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.