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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 16-17

The Lord Takes Care of His People

A miktam of David.

16 Protect me, God,
    because I trust in you.
I said to the Lord, “You are my Lord.
    Every good thing I have comes from you.”
As for the godly people in the world,
    they are the wonderful ones I enjoy.
But those who turn to idols
    will have much pain.
I will not offer blood to those idols
    or even speak their names.

No, the Lord is all I need.
    He takes care of me.
My share in life has been pleasant;
    my part has been beautiful.

I praise the Lord because he advises me.
    Even at night, I feel his leading.
I keep the Lord before me always.
    Because he is close by my side,
    I will not be hurt.
So I rejoice and am glad.
    Even my body has hope,
10 because you will not leave me in the grave.
    You will not let your holy one rot.
11 You will teach me how to live a holy life.
    Being with you will fill me with joy;
    at your right hand I will find pleasure forever.

A Prayer for Protection

A prayer of David.

17 Lord, hear me begging for fairness;
    listen to my cry for help.
Pay attention to my prayer,
    because I speak the truth.
You will judge that I am right;
    your eyes can see what is true.
You have examined my heart;
    you have tested me all night.
You questioned me without finding anything wrong;
    I have not sinned with my mouth.
I have obeyed your commands,
    so I have not done what evil people do.
I have done what you told me;
    I have not failed.

I call to you, God,
    and you answer me.
Listen to me now,
    and hear what I say.
Your love is wonderful.
    By your power you save those who trust you
    from their enemies.
Protect me as you would protect your own eye.
    Hide me under the shadow of your wings.
Keep me from the wicked who attack me,
    from my enemies who surround me.
10 They are selfish
    and brag about themselves.
11 They have chased me until they have surrounded me.
    They plan to throw me to the ground.
12 They are like lions ready to kill;
    like lions, they sit in hiding.

13 Lord, rise up, face the enemy, and throw them down.
    Save me from the wicked with your sword.
14 Lord, save me by your power
    from those whose reward is in this life.
They have plenty of food.
    They have many sons
    and leave much money to their children.

15 Because I have lived right, I will see your face.
    When I wake up, I will see your likeness and be satisfied.

Psalm 22

The Prayer of a Suffering Man

For the director of music. To the tune of “The Doe of Dawn.” A psalm of David.

22 My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?
    You seem far from saving me,
    far away from my groans.
My God, I call to you during the day,
    but you do not answer.
I call at night;
    I am not silent.

You sit as the Holy One.
    The praises of Israel are your throne.
Our ancestors trusted you;
    they trusted, and you saved them.
They called to you for help
    and were rescued.
They trusted you
    and were not disappointed.

But I am like a worm instead of a man.
    People make fun of me and hate me.
Those who look at me laugh.
    They stick out their tongues and shake their heads.
They say, “Turn to the Lord for help.
    Maybe he will save you.
If he likes you,
    maybe he will rescue you.”

You had my mother give birth to me.
    You made me trust you
    while I was just a baby.
10 I have leaned on you since the day I was born;
    you have been my God since my mother gave me birth.
11 So don’t be far away from me.
    Now trouble is near,
    and there is no one to help.
12 People have surrounded me like angry bulls.
    Like the strong bulls of Bashan, they are on every side.
13 Like hungry, roaring lions
    they open their mouths at me.
14 My strength is gone,
    like water poured out onto the ground,
    and my bones are out of joint.
My heart is like wax;
    it has melted inside me.
15 My strength has dried up like a clay pot,
    and my tongue sticks to the top of my mouth.
    You laid me in the dust of death.
16 Evil people have surrounded me;
    like dogs they have trapped me.
    They have bitten my arms and legs.
17 I can count all my bones;
    people look and stare at me.
18 They divided my clothes among them,
    and they threw lots for my clothing.

19 But, Lord, don’t be far away.
    You are my strength; hurry to help me.
20 Save me from the sword;
    save my life from the dogs.
21 Rescue me from the lion’s mouth;
    save me from the horns of the bulls.

22 Then I will tell my brothers and sisters about you;
    I will praise you in the public meeting.
23 Praise the Lord, all you who respect him.
    All you descendants of Jacob, honor him;
    fear him, all you Israelites.
24 He does not ignore those in trouble.
He doesn’t hide from them
    but listens when they call out to him.
25 Lord, I praise you in the great meeting of your people;
    these worshipers will see me do what I promised.
26 Poor people will eat until they are full;
    those who look to the Lord will praise him.
    May your hearts live forever!
27 People everywhere will remember
    and will turn to the Lord.
All the families of the nations
    will worship him
28 because the Lord is King,
    and he rules the nations.

29 All the powerful people on earth will eat and worship.
    Everyone will bow down to him,
    all who will one day die.
30 The people in the future will serve him;
    they will always be told about the Lord.
31 They will tell that he does what is right.
    People who are not yet born
    will hear what God has done.

Amos 5:1-17

Israel Needs to Repent

Listen to this funeral song that I sing about you, people of Israel.
“The young girl Israel has fallen,
    and she will not rise up again.
She was left alone in her own land,
    and there is no one to help her up.”

This is what the Lord God says:

“If a thousand soldiers leave a city,
    only a hundred will return;
if a hundred soldiers leave a city,
    only ten will return.”

This is what the Lord says to the nation of Israel:

“Come to me and live.
But do not look in Bethel
or go to Gilgal,
    and do not go down to Beersheba.
The people of Gilgal will be taken away as captives,
    and Bethel will become nothing.”
Come to the Lord and live,
    or he will move like fire against the descendants of Joseph.
The fire will burn Bethel,
    and there will be no one to put it out.
You turn justice upside down,
    and you throw on the ground what is right.

God is the one who made the star groups Pleiades and Orion;
    he changes darkness into the morning light,
    and the day into dark night.
He calls for the waters of the sea
    to pour out on the earth.
    The Lord is his name.
He destroys the protected city;
    he ruins the strong, walled city.

10 You hate those who speak in court against evil,
    and you can’t stand those who tell the truth.
11 You walk on poor people,
    forcing them to give you grain.
You have built fancy houses of cut stone,
    but you will not live in them.
You have planted beautiful vineyards,
    but you will not drink the wine from them.
12 I know your many crimes,
    your terrible sins.
You hurt people who do right,
    you take money to do wrong,
    and you keep the poor from getting justice in court.
13 In such times the wise person will keep quiet,
    because it is a bad time.

14 Try to do good, not evil,
    so that you will live,
and the Lord God All-Powerful will be with you
    just as you say he is.
15 Hate evil and love good;
    be fair in the courts.
Maybe the Lord God All-Powerful will be kind
    to the people of Joseph who are left alive.

16 This is what the Lord, the Lord God All-Powerful, says:

“People will be crying in all the streets;
    they will be saying, ‘Oh, no!’ in the public places.
They will call the farmers to come and weep
    and will pay people to cry out loud for them.
17 People will be crying in all the vineyards,
    because I will pass among you to punish you,” says the Lord.

Jude 1-16

From Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and a brother of James.

To all who have been called by God. God the Father loves you, and you have been kept safe in Jesus Christ:

Mercy, peace, and love be yours richly.

God Will Punish Sinners

Dear friends, I wanted very much to write you about the salvation we all share. But I felt the need to write you about something else: I want to encourage you to fight hard for the faith that was given the holy people of God once and for all time. Some people have secretly entered your group. Long ago the prophets wrote about these people who will be judged guilty. They are against God and have changed the grace of our God into a reason for sexual sin. They also refuse to accept Jesus Christ, our only Master and Lord.

I want to remind you of some things you already know: Remember that the Lord[a] saved his people by bringing them out of the land of Egypt. But later he destroyed all those who did not believe. And remember the angels who did not keep their place of power but left their proper home. The Lord has kept these angels in darkness, bound with everlasting chains, to be judged on the great day. Also remember the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah[b] and the other towns around them. In the same way they were full of sexual sin and people who desired sexual relations that God does not allow. They suffer the punishment of eternal fire, as an example for all to see.

It is the same with these people who have entered your group. They are guided by dreams and make themselves filthy with sin. They reject God’s authority and speak against the angels. Not even the archangel[c] Michael, when he argued with the devil about who would have the body of Moses, dared to judge the devil guilty. Instead, he said, “The Lord punish you.” 10 But these people speak against things they do not understand. And what they do know, by feeling, as dumb animals know things, are the very things that destroy them. 11 It will be terrible for them. They have followed the way of Cain, and for money they have given themselves to doing the wrong that Balaam did. They have fought against God as Korah did, and like Korah, they surely will be destroyed. 12 They are like dirty spots in your special Christian meals you share. They eat with you and have no fear, caring only for themselves. They are clouds without rain, which the wind blows around. They are autumn trees without fruit that are pulled out of the ground. So they are twice dead. 13 They are like wild waves of the sea, tossing up their own shameful actions like foam. They are like stars that wander in the sky. A place in the blackest darkness has been kept for them forever.

14 Enoch, the seventh descendant from Adam, said about these people: “Look, the Lord is coming with many thousands of his holy angels to 15 judge every person. He is coming to punish all who are against God for all the evil they have done against him. And he will punish the sinners who are against God for all the evil they have said against him.”

16 These people complain and blame others, doing the evil things they want to do. They brag about themselves, and they flatter others to get what they want.

Matthew 22:1-14

A Story About a Wedding Feast

22 Jesus again used stories to teach them. He said, “The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding feast for his son. The king invited some people to the feast. When the feast was ready, the king sent his servants to tell the people, but they refused to come.

“Then the king sent other servants, saying, ‘Tell those who have been invited that my feast is ready. I have killed my best bulls and calves for the dinner, and everything is ready. Come to the wedding feast.’

“But the people refused to listen to the servants and left to do other things. One went to work in his field, and another went to his business. Some of the other people grabbed the servants, beat them, and killed them. The king was furious and sent his army to kill the murderers and burn their city.

“After that, the king said to his servants, ‘The wedding feast is ready. I invited those people, but they were not worthy to come. So go to the street corners and invite everyone you find to come to my feast.’ 10 So the servants went into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, both good and bad. And the wedding hall was filled with guests.

11 “When the king came in to see the guests, he saw a man who was not dressed for a wedding. 12 The king said, ‘Friend, how were you allowed to come in here? You are not dressed for a wedding.’ But the man said nothing. 13 So the king told some servants, ‘Tie this man’s hands and feet. Throw him out into the darkness, where people will cry and grind their teeth with pain.’

14 “Yes, many are invited, but only a few are chosen.”

New Century Version (NCV)

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