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
New Century Version (NCV)
Version
Psalm 80

A Prayer to Bring Israel Back

For the director of music. To the tune of “Lilies of the Agreement.” A psalm of Asaph.

80 Shepherd of Israel, listen to us.
    You lead the people of Joseph like a flock.
You sit on your throne between the gold creatures with wings.
    Show your greatness to the people of Ephraim, Benjamin, and Manasseh.
Use your strength,
    and come to save us.

God, take us back.
    Show us your kindness so we can be saved.

Lord God All-Powerful,
    how long will you be angry
    at the prayers of your people?
You have fed your people with tears;
    you have made them drink many tears.
You made those around us fight over us,
    and our enemies make fun of us.

God All-Powerful, take us back.
    Show us your kindness so we can be saved.

You brought us out of Egypt as if we were a vine.
    You forced out other nations and planted us in the land.
You cleared the ground for us.
    Like a vine, we took root and filled the land.
10 We covered the mountains with our shade.
    We had limbs like the mighty cedar tree.
11 Our branches reached the Mediterranean Sea,
    and our shoots went to the Euphrates River.

12 So why did you pull down our walls?
    Now everyone who passes by steals from us.
13 Like wild pigs they walk over us;
    like wild animals they feed on us.

14 God All-Powerful, come back.
    Look down from heaven and see.
Take care of us, your vine.
15 You planted this shoot with your own hands
    and strengthened this child.
16 Now it is cut down and burned with fire;
    you destroyed us by your angry looks.
17 With your hand,
    strengthen the one you have chosen for yourself.
18 Then we will not turn away from you.
    Give us life again, and we will call to you for help.

19 Lord God All-Powerful, take us back.
    Show us your kindness so we can be saved.

Psalm 77

Remembering God’s Help

For the director of music. For Jeduthun. A psalm of Asaph.

77 I cry out to God;
    I call to God, and he will hear me.
I look for the Lord on the day of trouble.
    All night long I reach out my hands,
    but I cannot be comforted.
When I remember God, I become upset;
    when I think, I become afraid. Selah

You keep my eyes from closing.
    I am too upset to say anything.
I keep thinking about the old days,
    the years of long ago.
At night I remember my songs.
    I think and I ask myself:
“Will the Lord reject us forever?
    Will he never be kind to us again?
Is his love gone forever?
    Has he stopped speaking for all time?
Has God forgotten mercy?
    Is he too angry to pity us?” Selah
10 Then I say, “This is what makes me sad:
    For years the power of God Most High was with us.”

11 I remember what the Lord did;
    I remember the miracles you did long ago.
12 I think about all the things you did
    and consider your deeds.

13 God, your ways are holy.
    No god is as great as our God.
14 You are the God who does miracles;
    you have shown people your power.
15 By your power you have saved your people,
    the descendants of Jacob and Joseph. Selah

16 God, the waters saw you;
    they saw you and became afraid;
    the deep waters shook with fear.
17 The clouds poured down their rain.
    The sky thundered.
    Your lightning flashed back and forth like arrows.
18 Your thunder sounded in the whirlwind.
    Lightning lit up the world.
    The earth trembled and shook.
19 You made a way through the sea
    and paths through the deep waters,
    but your footprints were not seen.
20 You led your people like a flock
    by using Moses and Aaron.

Psalm 79

The Nation Cries for Jerusalem

A psalm of Asaph.

79 God, nations have come against your chosen people.
    They have ruined your holy Temple.
    They have turned Jerusalem into ruins.
They have given the bodies of your servants as food to the wild birds.
They have given the bodies of those who worship you to the wild animals.
They have spilled blood like water all around Jerusalem.
    No one was left to bury the dead.
We are a joke to the other nations;
    they laugh and make fun of us.

Lord, how long will this last?
    Will you be angry forever?
    How long will your jealousy burn like a fire?
Be angry with the nations that do not know you
    and with the kingdoms that do not honor you.
They have gobbled up the people of Jacob
    and destroyed their land.
Don’t punish us for our past sins.
    Show your mercy to us soon,
    because we are helpless!
God our Savior, help us
    so people will praise you.
Save us and forgive our sins
    so people will honor you.
10 Why should the nations say,
    “Where is their God?”
Tell the other nations in our presence
    that you punish those who kill your servants.
11 Hear the moans of the prisoners.
    Use your great power
    to save those sentenced to die.

12 Repay those around us seven times over
    for their insults to you, Lord.
13 We are your people, the sheep of your flock.
    We will thank you always;
    forever and ever we will praise you.

Jeremiah 7:1-15

Jeremiah’s Temple Message

This is the word that the Lord spoke to Jeremiah: “Stand at the gate of the Temple and preach this message there:

“‘Hear the word of the Lord, all you people of the nation of Judah! All you who come through these gates to worship the Lord, listen to this message! This is what the Lord All-Powerful, the God of Israel, says: Change your lives and do what is right! Then I will let you live in this place. Don’t trust the lies of people who say, “This is the Temple of the Lord. This is the Temple of the Lord. This is the Temple of the Lord!” You must change your lives and do what is right. Be fair to each other. You must not be hard on strangers, orphans, and widows. Don’t kill innocent people in this place! Don’t follow other gods, or they will ruin your lives. If you do these things, I will let you live in this land that I gave to your ancestors to keep forever.

“‘But look, you are trusting lies, which is useless. Will you steal and murder and be guilty of adultery? Will you falsely accuse other people? Will you burn incense to the god Baal and follow other gods you have not known? 10 If you do that, do you think you can come before me and stand in this place where I have chosen to be worshiped? Do you think you can say, “We are safe!” when you do all these hateful things? 11 This place where I have chosen to be worshiped is nothing more to you than a hideout for robbers. I have been watching you, says the Lord.

12 “‘You people of Judah, go now to the town of Shiloh, where I first made a place to be worshiped. See what I did to it because of the evil things the people of Israel had done. 13 You people of Judah have done all these evil things too, says the Lord. I spoke to you again and again, but you did not listen to me. I called you, but you did not answer. 14 So I will destroy the place where I have chosen to be worshiped in Jerusalem. You trust in that place, which I gave to you and your ancestors, but I will destroy it just as I destroyed Shiloh. 15 I will push you away from me just as I pushed away your relatives, the people of Israel!’

Romans 4:1-12

The Example of Abraham

So what can we say that Abraham,[a] the father of our people, learned about faith? If Abraham was made right by the things he did, he had a reason to brag. But this is not God’s view, because the Scripture says, “Abraham believed God, and God accepted Abraham’s faith, and that faith made him right with God.”[b]

When people work, their pay is not given as a gift, but as something earned. But people cannot do any work that will make them right with God. So they must trust in him, who makes even evil people right in his sight. Then God accepts their faith, and that makes them right with him. David said the same thing. He said that people are truly blessed when God, without paying attention to their deeds, makes people right with himself.

“Blessed are they
    whose sins are forgiven,
    whose wrongs are pardoned.
Blessed is the person
    whom the Lord does not consider guilty.” Psalm 32:1–2

Is this blessing only for those who are circumcised or also for those who are not circumcised? We have already said that God accepted Abraham’s faith and that faith made him right with God. 10 So how did this happen? Did God accept Abraham before or after he was circumcised? It was before his circumcision. 11 Abraham was circumcised to show that he was right with God through faith before he was circumcised. So Abraham is the father of all those who believe but are not circumcised; he is the father of all believers who are accepted as being right with God. 12 And Abraham is also the father of those who have been circumcised and who live following the faith that our father Abraham had before he was circumcised.

John 7:14-36

Jesus Teaches at the Feast

14 When the feast was about half over, Jesus went to the Temple and began to teach. 15 The people were amazed and said, “This man has never studied in school. How did he learn so much?”

16 Jesus answered, “The things I teach are not my own, but they come from him who sent me. 17 If people choose to do what God wants, they will know that my teaching comes from God and not from me. 18 Those who teach their own ideas are trying to get honor for themselves. But those who try to bring honor to the one who sent them speak the truth, and there is nothing false in them. 19 Moses gave you the law,[a] but none of you obeys that law. Why are you trying to kill me?”

20 The people answered, “A demon has come into you. We are not trying to kill you.”

21 Jesus said to them, “I did one miracle, and you are all amazed. 22 Moses gave you the law about circumcision. (But really Moses did not give you circumcision; it came from our ancestors.) And yet you circumcise a baby boy on a Sabbath day. 23 If a baby boy can be circumcised on a Sabbath day to obey the law of Moses, why are you angry at me for healing a person’s whole body on the Sabbath day? 24 Stop judging by the way things look, but judge by what is really right.”

Is Jesus the Christ?

25 Then some of the people who lived in Jerusalem said, “This is the man they are trying to kill. 26 But he is teaching where everyone can see and hear him, and no one is trying to stop him. Maybe the leaders have decided he really is the Christ. 27 But we know where this man is from. Yet when the real Christ comes, no one will know where he comes from.”

28 Jesus, teaching in the Temple, cried out, “Yes, you know me, and you know where I am from. But I have not come by my own authority. I was sent by the One who is true, whom you don’t know. 29 But I know him, because I am from him, and he sent me.”

30 When Jesus said this, they tried to seize him. But no one was able to touch him, because it was not yet the right time. 31 But many of the people believed in Jesus. They said, “When the Christ comes, will he do more miracles than this man has done?”

The Leaders Try to Arrest Jesus

32 The Pharisees heard the crowd whispering these things about Jesus. So the leading priests and the Pharisees sent some Temple guards to arrest him. 33 Jesus said, “I will be with you a little while longer. Then I will go back to the One who sent me. 34 You will look for me, but you will not find me. And you cannot come where I am.”

35 Some people said to each other, “Where will this man go so we cannot find him? Will he go to the Greek cities where our people live and teach the Greek people there? 36 What did he mean when he said, ‘You will look for me, but you will not find me,’ and ‘You cannot come where I am’?”

New Century Version (NCV)

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