Print Page Options
Previous Prev Day Next DayNext

Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
Contemporary English Version (CEV)
Version
Psalm 37

(By David.)

Trust the Lord

Don't be annoyed by anyone
who does wrong,
    and don't envy them.
They will soon disappear
    like grass without rain.

Trust the Lord and live right!
The land will be yours,
    and you will be safe.
Do what the Lord wants,
and he will give you
    your heart's desire.

Let the Lord lead you
    and trust him to help.
Then it will be as clear
as the noonday sun
    that you were right.

Be patient and trust the Lord.
    Don't let it bother you
when all goes well for those
    who do sinful things.
Don't be angry or furious.
    Anger can lead to sin.
All sinners will disappear,
but if you trust the Lord,
    the land will be yours.

10 Sinners will soon disappear,
    never to be found,
11 (A) but the poor will take the land
    and enjoy a big harvest.

12 Merciless people make plots
against good people
    and snarl like animals,
13 but the Lord laughs and knows
    their time is coming soon.
14 The wicked kill with swords
and shoot arrows to murder
    the poor and the needy
    and all who do right.
15 But they will be killed
    by their own swords,
and their arrows
    will be broken.

16 It is better to live right
and be poor
    than to be sinful and rich.
17 The wicked will lose all
    of their power,
but the Lord gives strength
    to everyone who is good.

18 Those who obey the Lord
    are daily in his care,
and what he has given them
    will be theirs forever.
19 They won't be in trouble
    when times are bad,
and they will have plenty
    when food is scarce.

20 Wicked people are enemies
    of the Lord
and will vanish like smoke
    from a field on fire.

21 An evil person borrows
    and never pays back;
a good person is generous
    and never stops giving.
22 Everyone the Lord blesses
    will receive the land;
everyone the Lord curses
    will be destroyed.

23 If you do what the Lord wants,
he will make certain
    each step you take is sure.
24 The Lord will hold your hand,
and if you stumble,
    you still won't fall.

25 As long as I can remember,
good people have never
    been left helpless,
and their children have never
    gone begging for food.
26 They gladly give and lend,
and their children
    turn out good.

27 If you stop sinning
    and start doing right,
you will keep living
    and be secure forever.
28 The Lord loves justice,
and he won't ever desert
    his faithful people.
He always protects them,
but destroys the children
    of the wicked.
29 God's people will own the land
    and live here forever.

30 Words of wisdom come
when good people speak
    for justice.
31 They remember God's teachings,
and they never take
    a wrong step.

32 The wicked try to trap
    and kill good people,
33 but the Lord is on their side,
and he will defend them
    when they are on trial.

34 Trust the Lord and follow him.
    He will give you the land,
and you will see
    the wicked destroyed.

35 I have seen brutal people
abuse others and grow strong
    like trees in rich soil.[a]
36 Suddenly they disappeared!
I looked, but they were gone
    and no longer there.

37 Think of the bright future
waiting for all the families
    of honest, innocent,
    and peace-loving people.
38 But not a trace will be left
of the wicked
    or their families.

39 The Lord protects his people,
and they can come to him
    in times of trouble.
40 The Lord helps his people
and saves them from the wicked
    because they run to him.

Error: 'Sirach 10:1-18' not found for the version: Contemporary English Version
Revelation 9:1-12

When the fifth angel blew his trumpet, I saw a star[a] fall from the sky to earth. It was given the key to the tunnel that leads down to the deep pit. (A) As it opened the tunnel, smoke poured out like the smoke of a great furnace. The sun and the air turned dark because of the smoke. (B) Locusts[b] came out of the smoke and covered the earth. They were given the same power that scorpions have.

(C) The locusts were told not to harm the grass on the earth or any plant or any tree. They were to punish only those people who did not have God's mark on their foreheads. The locusts were allowed to make them suffer for five months, but not to kill them. The suffering they caused was like the sting of a scorpion. (D) In those days people will want to die, but they will not be able to. They will hope for death, but it will escape from them.

(E) These locusts looked like horses ready for battle. On their heads they wore something like gold crowns, and they had human faces. (F) Their hair was like a woman's long hair, and their teeth were like those of a lion. (G) On their chests they wore armor made of iron. Their wings roared like an army of horse-drawn chariots rushing into battle. 10 Their tails were like a scorpion's tail with a stinger that had the power to hurt someone for five months. 11 Their king was the angel in charge of the deep pit. In Hebrew his name was Abaddon, and in Greek it was Apollyon.[c]

12 The first horrible thing has now happened! But wait. Two more horrible things will happen soon.

Luke 10:25-37

The Good Samaritan

25 (A) An expert in the Law of Moses stood up and asked Jesus a question to see what he would say. “Teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to have eternal life?”

26 Jesus answered, “What is written in the Scriptures? How do you understand them?”

27 (B) The man replied, “The Scriptures say, ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind.’ They also say, ‘Love your neighbors as much as you love yourself.’ ”

28 (C) Jesus said, “You have given the right answer. If you do this, you will have eternal life.”

29 But the man wanted to show that he knew what he was talking about. So he asked Jesus, “Who are my neighbors?”

30 Jesus replied:

As a man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, robbers attacked him and grabbed everything he had. They beat him up and ran off, leaving him half dead.

31 A priest happened to be going down the same road. But when he saw the man, he walked by on the other side. 32 Later a temple helper[a] came to the same place. But when he saw the man who had been beaten up, he also went by on the other side.

33 (D) A man from Samaria then came traveling along that road. When he saw the man, he felt sorry for him 34 and went over to him. He treated his wounds with olive oil and wine[b] and bandaged them. Then he put him on his own donkey and took him to an inn, where he took care of him. 35 The next morning he gave the innkeeper two silver coins and said, “Please take care of the man. If you spend more than this on him, I will pay you when I return.”

36 Then Jesus asked, “Which one of these three people was a real neighbor to the man who was beaten up by robbers?”

37 The expert in the Law of Moses answered, “The one who showed pity.”

Jesus said, “Go and do the same!”

Contemporary English Version (CEV)

Copyright © 1995 by American Bible Society For more information about CEV, visit www.bibles.com and www.cev.bible.