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
Names of God Bible (NOG)
Version
Psalm 16-17

Psalm 16

A miktam[a] by David.

Protect me, O El, because I take refuge in you.
I said to Yahweh,
    “You are my Adonay. Without you, I have nothing good.”
Those who lead holy lives on earth
    are the noble ones who fill me with joy.[b]
Those who quickly chase after other gods multiply their sorrows.
    I will not pour out their sacrificial offerings of blood
        or use my lips to speak their names.

Yahweh is my inheritance and my cup.
    You are the one who determines my destiny.
Your boundary lines mark out pleasant places for me.
    Indeed, my inheritance is something beautiful.

I will praise Yahweh, who advises me.
    My conscience warns me at night.
I always keep Yahweh in front of me.
    When he is by my side, I cannot be moved.
        That is why my heart is glad and my soul rejoices.
            My body rests securely
10 because you do not abandon my soul to the grave
    or allow your holy one to decay.
11 You make the path of life known to me.
    Complete joy is in your presence.
        Pleasures are by your side forever.

Psalm 17

A prayer by David.

Hear my plea for justice, O Yahweh.
    Pay attention to my cry.
    Open your ears to my prayer,
    which comes from lips free from deceit.
Let the verdict of my innocence come directly from you.
    Let your eyes observe what is fair.

You have probed my heart.
    You have confronted me at night.
    You have tested me like silver,
    but you found nothing wrong.
    I have determined that my mouth will not sin.
I have avoided cruelty because of your word.
    In spite of what others have done,
        my steps have remained firmly in your paths.
        My feet have not slipped.
I have called on you because you answer me, O El.
    Turn your ear toward me.
    Hear what I have to say.
Reveal your miraculous deeds of mercy,
    O Savior of those who find refuge by your side
        from those who attack them.
Guard me as if I were the pupil in your eye.
    Hide me in the shadow of your wings.
Hide me from wicked people who violently attack me,
    from my deadly enemies who surround me.

10 They have shut out all feeling.[c]
    Their mouths have spoken arrogantly.
11 They have tracked me down.
    They have surrounded me.
    They have focused their attention on throwing me to the ground.
12 Each one of them is like a lion eager to tear its prey apart
    and like a young lion crouching in hiding places.

13 Arise, O Yahweh; confront them!
    Bring them to their knees!
    With your sword rescue my life from wicked people.
14 With your power rescue me from mortals, O Yahweh,
    from mortals who enjoy their inheritance only in this life.
        You fill their bellies with your treasure.
            Their children are satisfied with it,
                and they leave what remains to their children.

15 I will see your face when I am declared innocent.
    When I wake up, I will be satisfied with seeing you.

Psalm 22

Psalm 22

For the choir director; according to ayyeleth hashachar;[a] a psalm by David.

My El, my El,
    why have you abandoned me?
    Why are you so far away from helping me,
        so far away from the words of my groaning?
My Elohim,
    I cry out by day, but you do not answer—
        also at night, but I find no rest.

Yet, you are holy, enthroned on the praises of Israel.
Our ancestors trusted you.
    They trusted, and you rescued them.
They cried to you and were saved.
    They trusted you and were never disappointed.

Yet, I am a worm and not a man.
    I am scorned by humanity and despised by people.
All who see me make fun of me.
    Insults pour from their mouths.
        They shake their heads and say,
            “Put yourself in Yahweh’s hands.
                Let Yahweh save him!
                Let Yahweh rescue him since he is pleased with him!”
Indeed, you are the one who brought me out of the womb,
    the one who made me feel safe at my mother’s breasts.
10 I was placed in your care from birth.
    From my mother’s womb you have been my El.

11 Do not be so far away from me.
    Trouble is near, and there is no one to help.
12 Many bulls have surrounded me.
    Strong bulls from Bashan have encircled me.
13 They have opened their mouths to attack me
    like ferocious, roaring lions.
14 I am poured out like water,
    and all my bones are out of joint.
        My heart is like wax.
            It has melted within me.
15 My strength is dried up like pieces of broken pottery.
    My tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth.
    You lay me down in the dust of death.
16 Dogs have surrounded me.
    A mob has encircled me.
    They have pierced my hands and feet.
17 I can count all my bones.
    People stare.
    They gloat over me.
18 They divide my clothes among themselves.
    They throw dice for my clothing.

19 Do not be so far away, O Yahweh.
    Come quickly to help me, O my strength.
20 Rescue my soul from the sword,
    my life from vicious dogs.
21 Save me from the mouth of the lion
    and from the horns of wild oxen.

You have answered me.

22 I will tell my people about your name.
    I will praise you within the congregation.
23 All who fear Yahweh, praise him!
    All you descendants of Jacob, glorify him!
    Stand in awe of him, all you descendants of Israel.
24 Yahweh has not despised or been disgusted
    with the plight of the oppressed one.
        He has not hidden his face from that person.
            Yahweh heard when that oppressed person
                cried out to him for help.
25 My praise comes from you while I am among those assembled for worship.
    I will fulfill my vows in the presence of those who fear Yahweh.
26 Oppressed people will eat until they are full.
    Those who look to Yahweh will praise him.
        May you live forever.
27 All the ends of the earth will remember and return to Yahweh.
    All the families from all the nations will worship you
28 because the kingdom belongs to Yahweh
    and he rules the nations.
29 All prosperous people on earth will eat and worship.
    All those who go down to the dust will kneel in front of him,
    even those who are barely alive.
30 There will be descendants who serve him,
    a generation that will be told about Adonay.
31 They will tell people yet to be born about his righteousness—
    that he has finished it.

Amos 5:1-17

A Funeral Song about Israel

Listen to this message, this funeral song that I sing about you, nation of Israel:

The people of Israel have fallen,
    never to rise again.
    They lie abandoned in their own land.
    There is no one to help them.

This is what Adonay Yahweh says:

The city that sends 1,000 troops off to war
    will have only 100 left.
    The one that sends 100 troops off to war
    will have only 10 left for the nation of Israel.

A Threefold Call to Turn Away from Sin

This is what Yahweh says to the nation of Israel:

Search for me and live!
But don’t search for me at Bethel.
    Don’t go to Gilgal.
        Don’t travel to Beersheba.
        Gilgal will certainly go into exile.
    Bethel will come to nothing.
Search for Yahweh and live!
    If you don’t, he will spread like a fire through the house of Joseph
        and burn it down.
            Bethel will have no one to put it out.

You, Israel, turn justice into poison
    and throw righteousness on the ground.

Elohim made the constellations Pleiades and Orion.
    He turns deep darkness into dawn.
    He turns day into night.
    He calls for water from the sea
        to pour it over the face of the earth.
    His name is Yahweh.
He destroys strongholds and ruins fortresses.

10 Israel, you hate anyone who speaks out against injustice.
    You are disgusted by anyone who speaks the truth.
11 You trample on the poor
    and take their wheat from them for taxes.
        That is why you build houses from hand-cut stones,
            but you will not live in them.
        You plant beautiful vineyards,
            but you will not drink their wine.
12 I know that your crimes are numerous and your sins are many.
    You oppress the righteous by taking bribes.
        You deny the needy access to the courts.
13 That is why a wise person remains silent at such times,
    because those times are so evil.

14 Search for good instead of evil so that you may live.
    Then Yahweh Elohe Tsebaoth will be with you, as you have said.
15 Hate evil and love good.
    Then you will be able to have justice in your courts.
        Maybe Yahweh Elohe Tsebaoth
            will have pity on the faithful few of Joseph.

16 This is what Adonay Yahweh Elohe Tsebaoth, says:

There will be loud crying in every city square,
    and people will say in every street, “Oh, no!”
    They will call on farmers to mourn
    and on professional mourners to cry loudly.
17 There will be loud crying in every vineyard,
    because I will pass through your land with death.

Yahweh has said this.

Jude 1-16

Greeting

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

To those who have been called, who are loved by God the Father, and who are kept safe for Yeshua Christ.

May mercy, peace, and love fill your lives!

Warnings about False Teachers

Dear friends, I had intended to write to you about the salvation we share. But something has come up. It demands that I write to you and encourage you to continue your fight for the Christian faith that was entrusted to God’s holy people once for all time.

Some people have slipped in among you unnoticed. Not long ago they were condemned in writing for the following reason: They are people to whom God means nothing. They use God’s kindness[a] as an excuse for sexual freedom and deny our only Master and Lord, Yeshua Christ.

I want to remind you about what you already know: The Lord once saved his people from Egypt. But on another occasion he destroyed those who didn’t believe. He held angels for judgment on the great day. They were held in darkness, bound by eternal chains. These are the angels who didn’t keep their position of authority but abandoned their assigned place. What happened to Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities near them is an example for us of the punishment of eternal fire. The people of these cities suffered the same fate that God’s people and the angels did, because they committed sexual sins and engaged in homosexual activities.

Yet, in a similar way, the people who slipped in among you are dreamers. They contaminate their bodies with sin, reject the Lord’s authority, and insult his glory. When the archangel Michael argued with the devil, they were arguing over the body of Moses. But Michael didn’t dare to hand down a judgment against the devil. Instead, Michael said, “May the Lord reprimand you!”

10 Whatever these people don’t understand, they insult. Like animals, which are creatures of instinct, they use whatever they know to destroy themselves. 11 How horrible it will be for them! They have followed the path of Cain. They have rushed into Balaam’s error to make a profit. They have rebelled like Korah and destroyed themselves.

12 These people are a disgrace at the special meals you share with other believers. They eat with you and don’t feel ashamed. They are shepherds who care only for themselves. They are dry clouds blown around by the winds. They are withered, uprooted trees without any fruit. As a result, they have died twice. 13 Their shame is like the foam on the wild waves of the sea. They are wandering stars for whom gloomy darkness is kept forever.

14 Furthermore, Enoch, from the seventh generation after Adam, prophesied about them. He said, “The Lord has come with countless thousands of his holy angels. 15 He has come to judge all these people. He has come to convict all these ungodly sinners for all the ungodly things they have done and all the harsh things they have said about him.”

16 These people complain, find fault, follow their own desires, say arrogant things, and flatter people in order to take advantage of them.

Matthew 22:1-14

A Story about a Wedding Reception

22 Again Yeshua used stories as illustrations when he spoke to them. He said, “The kingdom of heaven is like a king who planned a wedding for his son. He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the wedding, but they refused to come. He sent other servants to tell the people who had been invited, ‘I’ve prepared dinner. My bulls and fattened calves have been butchered. Everything is ready. Come to the wedding!’

“But they paid no attention and went away. Some went to work in their own fields, and others went to their businesses. The rest grabbed the king’s servants, mistreated them, and then killed them.

“The king became angry. He sent his soldiers, killed those murderers, and burned their city.

“Then the king said to his servants, ‘The wedding is ready, but those who were invited don’t deserve the honor. Go where the roads leave the city. Invite everyone you find to the wedding.’ 10 The servants went into the streets and brought in all the good people and all the evil people they found. And the wedding hall was filled with guests.

11 “When the king came to see the guests, he saw a person who was not dressed in the wedding clothes provided for the guests. 12 He said to him, ‘Friend, how did you get in here without proper wedding clothes?’

“The man had nothing to say. 13 Then the king told his servants, ‘Tie his hands and feet, and throw him outside into the darkness. People will cry and be in extreme pain there.’

14 “Therefore, many are invited, but few of those are chosen to stay.”

Names of God Bible (NOG)

The Names of God Bible (without notes) © 2011 by Baker Publishing Group.