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 20-21

A Prayer for the King

For the director of music. A psalm of David.

20 May the Lord answer you in times of trouble.
    May the God of Jacob protect you.
May he send you help from his Temple
    and support you from Mount Zion.
May he remember all your offerings
    and accept all your sacrifices. Selah
May he give you what you want
    and make all your plans succeed,
and we will shout for joy when you succeed,
    and we will raise a flag in the name of our God.
May the Lord give you all that you ask for.

Now I know the Lord helps his appointed king.
    He answers him from his holy heaven
    and saves him with his strong right hand.
Some trust in chariots, others in horses,
    but we trust the Lord our God.
They are overwhelmed and defeated,
    but we march forward and win.
Lord, save the king!
    Answer us when we call for help.

Thanksgiving for the King

For the director of music. A psalm of David.

21 Lord, the king rejoices because of your strength;
    he is so happy when you save him!
You gave the king what he wanted
    and did not refuse what he asked for. Selah
You put good things before him
    and placed a gold crown on his head.
He asked you for life,
    and you gave it to him,
    so his years go on and on.
He has great glory because you gave him victories;
    you gave him honor and praise.
You always gave him blessings;
    you made him glad because you were with him.
The king truly trusts the Lord.
    Because God Most High always loves him,
    he will not be overwhelmed.
Your hand is against all your enemies;
    those who hate you will feel your power.
When you appear,
    you will burn them as in a furnace.
In your anger you will swallow them up,
    and fire will burn them up.
10 You will destroy their families from the earth;
    their children will not live.
11 They made evil plans against you,
    but their traps won’t work.
12 You will make them turn their backs
    when you aim your arrows at them.
13 Be supreme, Lord, in your power.
    We sing and praise your greatness.

Psalm 110

The Lord Appoints a King

A psalm of David.

110 The Lord said to my Lord,
“Sit by me at my right side
    until I put your enemies under your control.”
The Lord will enlarge your kingdom beyond Jerusalem,
    and you will rule over your enemies.
Your people will join you on your day of battle.
    You have been dressed in holiness from birth;
    you have the freshness of a child.

The Lord has made a promise
    and will not change his mind.
He said, “You are a priest forever,
    a priest like Melchizedek.”

The Lord is beside you to help you.
    When he becomes angry, he will crush kings.
He will judge those nations, filling them with dead bodies;
    he will defeat rulers all over the world.
The king will drink from the brook on the way.
    Then he will be strengthened.

Psalm 116-117

Thanksgiving for Escaping Death

116 I love the Lord,
    because he listens to my prayers for help.
He paid attention to me,
    so I will call to him for help as long as I live.
The ropes of death bound me,
    and the fear of the grave took hold of me.
    I was troubled and sad.
Then I called out the name of the Lord.
    I said, “Please, Lord, save me!”

The Lord is kind and does what is right;
    our God is merciful.
The Lord watches over the foolish;
    when I was helpless, he saved me.
I said to myself, “Relax,
    because the Lord takes care of you.”
Lord, you saved me from death.
    You stopped my eyes from crying;
    you kept me from being defeated.
So I will walk with the Lord
    in the land of the living.
10 I believed, so I said,
    “I am completely ruined.”
11 In my distress I said,
    “All people are liars.”

12 What can I give the Lord
    for all the good things he has given to me?
13 I will lift up the cup of salvation,
    and I will pray to the Lord.
14 I will give the Lord what I promised
    in front of all his people.

15 The death of one that belongs to the Lord
    is precious in his sight.
16 Lord, I am your servant;
    I am your servant and the son of your female servant.
    You have freed me from my chains.
17 I will give you an offering to show thanks to you,
    and I will pray to the Lord.
18 I will give the Lord what I promised
    in front of all his people,
19 in the Temple courtyards
    in Jerusalem.

Praise the Lord!

A Hymn of Praise

117 All you nations, praise the Lord.
    All you people, praise him
because the Lord loves us very much,
    and his truth is everlasting.

Praise the Lord!

Genesis 6:9-22

Noah and the Great Flood

This is the family history of Noah. Noah was a good man, the most innocent man of his time, and he walked with God. 10 He had three sons: Shem, Ham, and Japheth.

11 People on earth did what God said was evil, and violence was everywhere. 12 When God saw that everyone on the earth did only evil, 13 he said to Noah, “Because people have made the earth full of violence, I will destroy all of them from the earth. 14 Build a boat of cypress wood for yourself. Make rooms in it and cover it inside and outside with tar. 15 This is how big I want you to build the boat: four hundred fifty feet long, seventy-five feet wide, and forty-five feet high. 16 Make an opening around the top of the boat that is eighteen inches high from the edge of the roof down. Put a door in the side of the boat. Make an upper, middle, and lower deck in it. 17 I will bring a flood of water on the earth to destroy all living things that live under the sky, including everything that has the breath of life. Everything on the earth will die. 18 But I will make an agreement with you—you, your sons, your wife, and your sons’ wives will all go into the boat. 19 Also, you must bring into the boat two of every living thing, male and female. Keep them alive with you. 20 Two of every kind of bird, animal, and crawling thing will come to you to be kept alive. 21 Also gather some of every kind of food and store it on the boat as food for you and the animals.”

22 Noah did everything that God commanded him.

Hebrews 4:1-13

Now, since God has left us the promise that we may enter his rest, let us be very careful so none of you will fail to enter. The Good News was preached to us just as it was to them. But the teaching they heard did not help them, because they heard it but did not accept it with faith.[a] We who have believed are able to enter and have God’s rest. As God has said,

“I was angry and made a promise,
    ‘They will never enter my rest.’” Psalm 95:11

But God’s work was finished from the time he made the world. In the Scriptures he talked about the seventh day of the week: “And on the seventh day God rested from all his works.”[b] And again in the Scripture God said, “They will never enter my rest.”

It is still true that some people will enter God’s rest, but those who first heard the way to be saved did not enter, because they did not obey. So God planned another day, called “today.” He spoke about that day through David a long time later in the same Scripture used before:

“Today listen to what he says.
    Do not be stubborn.” Psalm 95:7–8

We know that Joshua[c] did not lead the people into that rest, because God spoke later about another day. This shows that the rest[d] for God’s people is still coming. 10 Anyone who enters God’s rest will rest from his work as God did. 11 Let us try as hard as we can to enter God’s rest so that no one will fail by following the example of those who refused to obey.

12 God’s word is alive and working and is sharper than a double-edged sword. It cuts all the way into us, where the soul and the spirit are joined, to the center of our joints and bones. And it judges the thoughts and feelings in our hearts. 13 Nothing in all the world can be hidden from God. Everything is clear and lies open before him, and to him we must explain the way we have lived.

John 2:13-22

13 When it was almost time for the Jewish Passover Feast, Jesus went to Jerusalem. 14 In the Temple he found people selling cattle, sheep, and doves. He saw others sitting at tables, exchanging different kinds of money. 15 Jesus made a whip out of cords and forced all of them, both the sheep and cattle, to leave the Temple. He turned over the tables and scattered the money of those who were exchanging it. 16 Then he said to those who were selling pigeons, “Take these things out of here! Don’t make my Father’s house a place for buying and selling!”

17 When this happened, the followers remembered what was written in the Scriptures: “My strong love for your Temple completely controls me.”[a]

18 Some of his people said to Jesus, “Show us a miracle to prove you have the right to do these things.”

19 Jesus answered them, “Destroy this temple, and I will build it again in three days.”

20 They answered, “It took forty-six years to build this Temple! Do you really believe you can build it again in three days?”

21 (But the temple Jesus meant was his own body. 22 After Jesus was raised from the dead, his followers remembered that Jesus had said this. Then they believed the Scripture and the words Jesus had said.)

New Century Version (NCV)

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