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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 45

A Song for the King’s Wedding

For the director of music. To the tune of “Lilies.” A maskil. A love song of the sons of Korah.

45 Beautiful words fill my mind.
    I am speaking of royal things.
    My tongue is like the pen of a skilled writer.

You are more handsome than anyone,
    and you are an excellent speaker,
    so God has blessed you forever.
Put on your sword, powerful warrior.
    Show your glory and majesty.
In your majesty win the victory
    for what is true and right.
    Your power will do amazing things.
Your sharp arrows will enter
    the hearts of the king’s enemies.
    Nations will be defeated before you.
God, your throne will last forever and ever.
    You will rule your kingdom with fairness.
You love right and hate evil,
    so God has chosen you from among your friends;
    he has set you apart with much joy.
Your clothes smell like myrrh, aloes, and cassia.
    From palaces of ivory
    music comes to make you happy.
Kings’ daughters are among your honored women.
    Your bride stands at your right side
    wearing gold from Ophir.

10 Listen to me, daughter; look and pay attention.
    Forget your people and your father’s family.
11 The king loves your beauty.
    Because he is your master, you should obey him.
12 People from the city of Tyre have brought a gift.
    Wealthy people will want to meet you.

13 The princess is very beautiful.
    Her gown is woven with gold.
14 In her beautiful clothes she is brought to the king.
    Her bridesmaids follow behind her,
    and they are also brought to him.
15 They come with happiness and joy;
    they enter the king’s palace.

16 You will have sons to replace your fathers.
    You will make them rulers through all the land.
17 I will make your name famous from now on,
    so people will praise you forever and ever.

Psalm 47-48

God, the King of the World

For the director of music. A psalm of the sons of Korah.

47 Clap your hands, all you people.
    Shout to God with joy.
The Lord Most High is wonderful.
    He is the great King over all the earth!
He defeated nations for us
    and put them under our control.
He chose the land we would inherit.
    We are the children of Jacob, whom he loved. Selah

God has risen with a shout of joy;
    the Lord has risen as the trumpets sounded.
Sing praises to God. Sing praises.
    Sing praises to our King. Sing praises.
God is King of all the earth,
    so sing a song of praise to him.
God is King over the nations.
    God sits on his holy throne.
The leaders of the nations meet
    with the people of the God of Abraham,
because the leaders of the earth belong to God.
    He is supreme.

Jerusalem, the City of God

A psalm of the sons of Korah.

48 The Lord is great; he should be praised
    in the city of our God, on his holy mountain.
It is high and beautiful
    and brings joy to the whole world.
Mount Zion is like the high mountains of the north;
    it is the city of the Great King.
God is within its palaces;
    he is known as its defender.
Kings joined together
    and came to attack the city.
But when they saw it, they were amazed.
    They ran away in fear.
Fear took hold of them;
    they hurt like a woman having a baby.
You destroyed the large trading ships
    with an east wind.

First we heard
    and now we have seen
that God will always keep his city safe.
    It is the city of the Lord All-Powerful,
    the city of our God. Selah

God, we come into your Temple
    to think about your love.
10 God, your name is known everywhere;
    all over the earth people praise you.
    Your right hand is full of goodness.
11 Mount Zion is happy
    and all the towns of Judah rejoice,
because your decisions are fair.

12 Walk around Jerusalem
    and count its towers.
13 Notice how strong they are.
    Look at the palaces.
    Then you can tell your children about them.
14 This God is our God forever and ever.
    He will guide us from now on.

Genesis 15:1-11

God’s Agreement with Abram

15 After these things happened, the Lord spoke his word to Abram in a vision: “Abram, don’t be afraid. I will defend you, and I will give you a great reward.”

But Abram said, “Lord God, what can you give me? I have no son, so my slave Eliezer from Damascus will get everything I own after I die.” Abram said, “Look, you have given me no son, so a slave born in my house will inherit everything I have.”

Then the Lord spoke his word to Abram: “He will not be the one to inherit what you have. You will have a son of your own who will inherit what you have.”

Then God led Abram outside and said, “Look at the sky. There are so many stars you cannot count them. Your descendants also will be too many to count.”

Abram believed the Lord. And the Lord accepted Abram’s faith, and that faith made him right with God.

God said to Abram, “I am the Lord who led you out of Ur of Babylonia so that I could give you this land to own.”

But Abram said, “Lord God, how can I be sure that I will own this land?”

The Lord said to Abram, “Bring me a three-year-old cow, a three-year-old goat, a three-year-old male sheep, a dove, and a young pigeon.”

10 Abram brought them all to God. Then Abram killed the animals and cut each of them into two pieces, laying each half opposite the other half. But he did not cut the birds in half. 11 Later, large birds flew down to eat the animals, but Abram chased them away.

Genesis 15:17-21

17 After the sun went down, it was very dark. Suddenly a smoking firepot and a blazing torch passed between the halves of the dead animals.[a] 18 So on that day the Lord made an agreement with Abram and said, “I will give to your descendants the land between the river of Egypt and the great river Euphrates. 19 This is the land of the Kenites, Kenizzites, Kadmonites, 20 Hittites, Perizzites, Rephaites, 21 Amorites, Canaanites, Girgashites, and Jebusites.”

Hebrews 9:1-14

The Old Agreement

The first agreement[a] had rules for worship and a place on earth for worship. The Holy Tent was set up for this. The first area in the Tent was called the Holy Place. In it were the lamp and the table with the bread that was made holy for God. Behind the second curtain was a room called the Most Holy Place. In it was a golden altar for burning incense and the Ark covered with gold that held the old agreement. Inside this Ark was a golden jar of manna, Aaron’s rod that once grew leaves, and the stone tablets of the old agreement. Above the Ark were the creatures that showed God’s glory, whose wings reached over the lid. But we cannot tell everything about these things now.

When everything in the Tent was made ready in this way, the priests went into the first room every day to worship. But only the high priest could go into the second room, and he did that only once a year. He could never enter the inner room without taking blood with him, which he offered to God for himself and for sins the people did without knowing they did them. The Holy Spirit uses this to show that the way into the Most Holy Place was not open while the system of the old Holy Tent was still being used. This is an example for the present time. It shows that the gifts and sacrifices offered cannot make the conscience of the worshiper perfect. 10 These gifts and sacrifices were only about food and drink and special washings. They were rules for the body, to be followed until the time of God’s new way.

The New Agreement

11 But when Christ came as the high priest of the good things we now have,[b] he entered the greater and more perfect tent. It is not made by humans and does not belong to this world. 12 Christ entered the Most Holy Place only once—and for all time. He did not take with him the blood of goats and calves. His sacrifice was his own blood, and by it he set us free from sin forever. 13 The blood of goats and bulls and the ashes of a cow are sprinkled on the people who are unclean, and this makes their bodies clean again. 14 How much more is done by the blood of Christ. He offered himself through the eternal Spirit[c] as a perfect sacrifice to God. His blood will make our consciences pure from useless acts so we may serve the living God.

John 5:1-18

Jesus Heals a Man at a Pool

Later Jesus went to Jerusalem for a special feast. In Jerusalem there is a pool with five covered porches, which is called Bethesda[a] in the Hebrew language.[b] This pool is near the Sheep Gate. Many sick people were lying on the porches beside the pool. Some were blind, some were crippled, and some were paralyzed [, and they waited for the water to move. Sometimes an angel of the Lord came down to the pool and stirred up the water. After the angel did this, the first person to go into the pool was healed from any sickness he had].[c] A man was lying there who had been sick for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw the man and knew that he had been sick for such a long time, Jesus asked him, “Do you want to be well?”

The sick man answered, “Sir, there is no one to help me get into the pool when the water starts moving. While I am coming to the water, someone else always gets in before me.”

Then Jesus said, “Stand up. Pick up your mat and walk.” And immediately the man was well; he picked up his mat and began to walk.

The day this happened was a Sabbath day. 10 So the Jews said to the man who had been healed, “Today is the Sabbath. It is against our law for you to carry your mat on the Sabbath day.”

11 But he answered, “The man who made me well told me, ‘Pick up your mat and walk.’

12 Then they asked him, “Who is the man who told you to pick up your mat and walk?”

13 But the man who had been healed did not know who it was, because there were many people in that place, and Jesus had left.

14 Later, Jesus found the man at the Temple and said to him, “See, you are well now. Stop sinning so that something worse does not happen to you.”

15 Then the man left and told his people that Jesus was the one who had made him well.

16 Because Jesus was doing this on the Sabbath day, some evil people began to persecute him. 17 But Jesus said to them, “My Father never stops working, and so I keep working, too.”

18 This made them try still harder to kill him. They said, “First Jesus was breaking the law about the Sabbath day. Now he says that God is his own Father, making himself equal with God!”

New Century Version (NCV)

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