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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 18

A Song of Victory

For the director of music. By the Lord’s servant, David. David sang this song to the Lord when the Lord had saved him from Saul and all his other enemies.

18 I love you, Lord. You are my strength.

The Lord is my rock, my protection, my Savior.
    My God is my rock.
    I can run to him for safety.
    He is my shield and my saving strength, my defender.
I will call to the Lord, who is worthy of praise,
    and I will be saved from my enemies.

The ropes of death came around me;
    the deadly rivers overwhelmed me.
The ropes of death wrapped around me.
    The traps of death were before me.
In my trouble I called to the Lord.
    I cried out to my God for help.
From his temple he heard my voice;
    my call for help reached his ears.

The earth trembled and shook.
    The foundations of the mountains began to shake.
    They trembled because the Lord was angry.
Smoke came out of his nose,
    and burning fire came out of his mouth.
    Burning coals went before him.
He tore open the sky and came down
    with dark clouds under his feet.
10 He rode a creature with wings and flew.
    He raced on the wings of the wind.
11 He made darkness his covering, his shelter around him,
    surrounded by fog and clouds.
12 Out of the brightness of his presence came clouds
    with hail and lightning.
13 The Lord thundered from heaven;
    the Most High raised his voice,
    and there was hail and lightning.
14 He shot his arrows and scattered his enemies.
    His many bolts of lightning confused them with fear.
15 Lord, you spoke strongly.
    The wind blew from your nose.
Then the valleys of the sea appeared,
    and the foundations of the earth were seen.

16 The Lord reached down from above and took me;
    he pulled me from the deep water.
17 He saved me from my powerful enemies,
    from those who hated me, because they were too strong for me.
18 They attacked me at my time of trouble,
    but the Lord supported me.
19 He took me to a safe place.
    Because he delights in me, he saved me.

20 The Lord spared me because I did what was right.
    Because I have not done evil, he has rewarded me.
21 I have followed the ways of the Lord;
    I have not done evil by turning away from my God.
22 I remember all his laws
    and have not broken his rules.
23 I am innocent before him;
    I have kept myself from doing evil.
24 The Lord rewarded me because I did what was right,
    because I did what the Lord said was right.

25 Lord, you are loyal to those who are loyal,
    and you are good to those who are good.
26 You are pure to those who are pure,
    but you are against those who are bad.
27 You save the humble,
    but you bring down those who are proud.
28 Lord, you give light to my lamp.
    My God brightens the darkness around me.
29 With your help I can attack an army.
    With God’s help I can jump over a wall.

30 The ways of God are without fault.
    The Lord’s words are pure.
He is a shield to those who trust him.
31 Who is God? Only the Lord.
    Who is the Rock? Only our God.
32 God is my protection.
    He makes my way free from fault.
33 He makes me like a deer that does not stumble;
    he helps me stand on the steep mountains.
34 He trains my hands for battle
    so my arms can bend a bronze bow.
35 You protect me with your saving shield.
    You support me with your right hand.
    You have stooped to make me great.
36 You give me a better way to live,
    so I live as you want me to.
37 I chased my enemies and caught them.
    I did not quit until they were destroyed.
38 I crushed them so they couldn’t rise up again.
    They fell beneath my feet.
39 You gave me strength in battle.
    You made my enemies bow before me.
40 You made my enemies turn back,
    and I destroyed those who hated me.
41 They called for help,
    but no one came to save them.
They called to the Lord,
    but he did not answer them.
42 I beat my enemies into pieces, like dust in the wind.
    I poured them out like mud in the streets.

43 You saved me when the people attacked me.
    You made me the leader of nations.
    People I never knew serve me.
44 As soon as they hear me, they obey me.
    Foreigners obey me.
45 They all become afraid
    and tremble in their hiding places.

46 The Lord lives!
    May my Rock be praised.
    Praise the God who saves me!
47 God gives me victory over my enemies
    and brings people under my rule.
48 He saves me from my enemies.

You set me over those who hate me.
    You saved me from violent people.
49 So I will praise you, Lord, among the nations.
    I will sing praises to your name.
50 The Lord gives great victories to his king.
    He is loyal to his appointed king,
    to David and his descendants forever.

Daniel 2:31-49

31 “O king, in your dream you saw a huge, shiny, and frightening statue in front of you. 32 The head of the statue was made of pure gold. Its chest and arms were made of silver. Its stomach and the upper part of its legs were made of bronze. 33 The lower part of the legs were made of iron, while its feet were made partly of iron and partly of baked clay. 34 While you were looking at the statue, you saw a rock cut free, but no human being touched the rock. It hit the statue on its feet of iron and clay and smashed them. 35 Then the iron, clay, bronze, silver, and gold broke to pieces at the same time. They became like chaff on a threshing floor in the summertime; the wind blew them away, and there was nothing left. Then the rock that hit the statue became a very large mountain that filled the whole earth.

36 “That was your dream. Now we will tell the king what it means. 37 O king, you are the greatest king. God of heaven has given you a kingdom, power, strength, and glory. 38 Wherever people, wild animals, and birds live, God made you ruler over them. King Nebuchadnezzar, you are the head of gold on that statue.

39 “Another kingdom will come after you, but it will not be as great as yours. Next a third kingdom, the bronze part, will rule over the earth. 40 Then there will be a fourth kingdom, strong as iron. In the same way that iron crushes and smashes things to pieces, the fourth kingdom will smash and crush all the other kingdoms.

41 “You saw that the statue’s feet and toes were partly baked clay and partly iron. That means the fourth kingdom will be a divided kingdom. It will have some of the strength of iron in it, just as you saw iron was mixed with clay. 42 The toes of the statue were partly iron and partly clay. So the fourth kingdom will be partly strong like iron and partly breakable like clay. 43 You saw the iron mixed with clay, but iron and clay do not hold together. In the same way the people of the fourth kingdom will be a mixture, but they will not be united as one people.

44 “During the time of those kings, the God of heaven will set up another kingdom that will never be destroyed or given to another group of people. This kingdom will crush all the other kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will continue forever.

45 “King Nebuchadnezzar, you saw a rock cut from a mountain, but no human being touched it. The rock broke the iron, bronze, clay, silver, and gold to pieces. In this way the great God showed you what will happen. The dream is true, and you can trust this explanation.”

46 Then King Nebuchadnezzar fell facedown on the ground in front of Daniel. The king honored him and commanded that an offering and incense be presented to him. 47 Then the king said to Daniel, “Truly I know your God is the greatest of all gods, the Lord of all the kings. He tells people about things they cannot know. I know this is true, because you were able to tell these secret things to me.”

48 Then the king gave Daniel many gifts plus an important position in his kingdom. Nebuchadnezzar made him ruler over the whole area of Babylon and put him in charge of all the wise men of Babylon. 49 Daniel asked the king to make Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego leaders over the area of Babylon, so the king did as Daniel asked. Daniel himself became one of the people who stayed at the royal court.

1 John 2:18-29

Reject the Enemies of Christ

18 My dear children, these are the last days. You have heard that the enemy of Christ is coming, and now many enemies of Christ are already here. This is how we know that these are the last days. 19 These enemies of Christ were in our fellowship, but they left us. They never really belonged to us; if they had been a part of us, they would have stayed with us. But they left, and this shows that none of them really belonged to us.

20 You have the gift[a] that the Holy One gave you, so you all know the truth.[b] 21 I do not write to you because you do not know the truth but because you do know the truth. And you know that no lie comes from the truth.

22 Who is the liar? It is the person who does not accept Jesus as the Christ. This is the enemy of Christ: the person who does not accept the Father and his Son. 23 Whoever does not accept the Son does not have the Father. But whoever confesses the Son has the Father, too.

24 Be sure you continue to follow the teaching you heard from the beginning. If you continue to follow what you heard from the beginning, you will stay in the Son and in the Father. 25 And this is what the Son promised to us—life forever.

26 I am writing this letter about those people who are trying to lead you the wrong way. 27 Christ gave you a special gift that is still in you, so you do not need any other teacher. His gift teaches you about everything, and it is true, not false. So continue to live in Christ, as his gift taught you.

28 Yes, my dear children, live in him so that when Christ comes back, we can be without fear and not be ashamed in his presence. 29 Since you know that Christ is righteous, you know that all who do right are God’s children.

Luke 3:1-14

The Preaching of John

It was the fifteenth year of the rule of Tiberius Caesar. These men were under Caesar: Pontius Pilate, the ruler of Judea; Herod, the ruler of Galilee; Philip, Herod’s brother, the ruler of Iturea and Traconitis; and Lysanias, the ruler of Abilene. Annas and Caiaphas were the high priests. At this time, the word of God came to John son of Zechariah in the desert. He went all over the area around the Jordan River preaching a baptism of changed hearts and lives for the forgiveness of sins. As it is written in the book of Isaiah the prophet:

“This is a voice of one
    who calls out in the desert:
‘Prepare the way for the Lord.
    Make the road straight for him.
Every valley should be filled in,
    and every mountain and hill should be made flat.
Roads with turns should be made straight,
    and rough roads should be made smooth.
And all people will know about the salvation of God!’” Isaiah 40:3–5

To the crowds of people who came to be baptized by John, he said, “You are all snakes! Who warned you to run away from God’s coming punishment? Do the things that show you really have changed your hearts and lives. Don’t begin to say to yourselves, ‘Abraham is our father.’ I tell you that God could make children for Abraham from these rocks. The ax is now ready to cut down the trees, and every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire.”[a]

10 The people asked John, “Then what should we do?”

11 John answered, “If you have two shirts, share with the person who does not have one. If you have food, share that also.”

12 Even tax collectors came to John to be baptized. They said to him, “Teacher, what should we do?”

13 John said to them, “Don’t take more taxes from people than you have been ordered to take.”

14 The soldiers asked John, “What about us? What should we do?”

John said to them, “Don’t force people to give you money, and don’t lie about them. Be satisfied with the pay you get.”

New Century Version (NCV)

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