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Book of Common Prayer

Daily Old and New Testament readings based on the Book of Common Prayer.
Duration: 861 days
International Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Psalm 55

A Prayer About a False Friend

For the director of music. With stringed instruments. A maskil of David.

55 God, listen to my prayer.
    Do not ignore my prayer.
Pay attention to me and answer me.
    I am troubled and upset
by what the enemy says
    and how the wicked look at me.
They bring troubles down on me.
    In anger they attack me.

I am frightened inside.
    The terror of death has attacked me.
I am scared and shaking.
    Terror grips me.
I said, “I wish I had wings like a dove.
    Then I would fly away and rest.
I would wander far away.
    I would stay in the desert. Selah
I would hurry to my place of escape,
    far away from the wind and storm.”

Lord, destroy and confuse their words.
    I see violence and fighting in the city.
10 Day and night they are all around its walls.
    Evil and trouble are everywhere inside.
11 Destruction is everywhere in the city.
    Trouble and lying never leave its streets.

12 It was not an enemy insulting me.
    I could stand that.
It was not someone who hated me.
    I could hide from him.
13 But it is you, a person like me.
    You were my companion and good friend.
14 We had a good friendship.
    We went together to God’s Temple.

15 Let death take away my enemies.
    Let them die while they are still young
    because evil lives with them.
16 But I will call to God for help.
    And the Lord will save me.
17 Morning, noon and night I am troubled and upset.
    But he will listen to me.
18 Many are against me.
    But he keeps me safe in battle.
19 God who lives forever
    will hear me and punish them.
But they will not change.
    They do not fear God. Selah

20 The one who was my friend attacks his friends.
    He breaks his promises.
21 His words are slippery like butter.
    But war is in his heart.
His words are smoother than oil,
    but they cut like knives.

22 Give your worries to the Lord.
    He will take care of you.
    He will never let good people down.
23 But, God, you will bring down
    the wicked to the grave.
Murderers and liars will live
    only half a lifetime.
But I will trust in you.

Psalm 74

A Nation in Trouble Prays

A maskil of Asaph.

74 God, why have you rejected us for so long?
    Why are you angry with us, the sheep of your pasture?
Remember the people you bought long ago.
    You saved us. We are your very own.
    You live on Mount Zion.
Make your way through these old ruins.
    The enemy wrecked everything in the Temple.

Those who were against you shouted in your meeting place.
    They raised their flags there.
They came with axes raised
    as if to cut down a forest of trees.
They smashed the carved panels
    with their axes and hatchets.
They burned your Temple to the ground.
    They have made the place where you live unclean.
They thought, “We will completely crush them!”
    They burned every place where God was worshiped in the land.
We do not see any signs.
    There are no more prophets.
    And no one knows how long this will last.
10 God, how much longer will the enemy make fun of you?
    Will they insult you forever?
11 Why do you hold back your power?
    Bring your power out in the open and destroy them!

12 God, you have been our king for a long time.
    You have saved this country.
13 You split open the sea by your power.
    You broke the heads of the sea monster.
14 You smashed the heads of the monster Leviathan.
    You gave him to the desert creatures as food.
15 You opened up the springs and streams.
    And you made the rivers run dry.
16 Both the day and the night are yours.
    You made the sun and the moon.
17 You made all the limits on the earth.
    You created summer and winter.

18 Lord, remember how the enemy insulted you.
    Remember how those foolish people turned away from you.
19 Do not give us, your doves, to those wild animals.
    Never forget your poor people.
20 Remember the agreement you made with us
    because violence fills every dark corner of this land.
21 Do not let your suffering people be disgraced.
    The poor and helpless people praise you.

22 God, come and defend yourself.
    Remember the insults that come from those foolish people all day long.
23 Don’t forget what your enemies said.
    Don’t forget their roar as they rise against you always.

Lamentations 2:1-9

The Lord Destroyed Jerusalem

Look how the Lord in his anger
    has brought Jerusalem to shame.
He has thrown down the greatness of Israel
    from the sky to the earth.
He did not remember the Temple, his footstool,
    on the day of his anger.

The Lord swallowed up without mercy
    all the houses of the people of Jacob.
In his anger he pulled down
    the strong places of Judah.
He threw her kingdom and its rulers
    down to the ground in dishonor.

In his anger the Lord has removed
    all the strength of Israel.
He took away his power from Israel
    when the enemy came.
He burned against the people of Jacob like a flaming fire
    that burns up everything around it.

Like an enemy, the Lord prepared to shoot his bow.
    He took hold of his sword.
Like an enemy, he killed
    all the good-looking people.
He poured out his anger like fire
    on the tents of Jerusalem.

The Lord has become like an enemy.
    He has swallowed up Israel.
He has swallowed up all her palaces.
    He has destroyed all her strong places.
He has caused more moaning and groaning
    for Judah.

He has destroyed his Temple as if it were a garden tent.
    He has destroyed the place where he met with his people.
The Lord has made Jerusalem forget
    the set feasts and Sabbath days.
He has rejected the king and the priest
    in his great anger.

The Lord has rejected his altar
    and abandoned his Temple.
He has given to the enemy
    the walls of Jerusalem’s palaces.
The enemy shouted in the Lord’s Temple
    as if it were a feast day.

The Lord planned to destroy
    the wall around Jerusalem.
He marked the wall off with a measuring line.
    He did not stop himself from destroying it.
He made the walls and defenses sad.
    Together they have fallen.

Jerusalem’s gates have fallen to the ground.
    He destroyed and smashed the bars of the gates.
Her king and her princes are sent away among the nations.
    The teaching of the Lord has stopped.
The prophets have not had
    any visions from the Lord.

Lamentations 2:14-17

14 Your prophets saw visions about you.
    But they were false and worth nothing.
They did not expose your sins.
    They did not keep you from being captured.
The messages they preached to you were false.
    They fooled you.

15 All who pass by on the road
    clap their hands at you.
They make fun and shake their heads
    at Jerusalem.
They ask, “Is this the city that people called
    the most beautiful city,
    the happiest city on earth?”

16 All your enemies open their mouths
    to say things against you.
They make fun and grind their teeth in anger.
    They say, “We have swallowed her up.
This is the day we were waiting for.
    We have finally seen it happen.”

17 The Lord has done what he planned.
    He has carried out the order
    that he commanded long ago.
He has destroyed without mercy.
    He has made your enemies happy because of what happened to you.
    He has strengthened your enemies.

2 Corinthians 1:23-2:11

23 I tell you this, and I ask God to be my witness that this is true: The reason I did not come back to Corinth was that I did not want to punish or hurt you. 24 I do not mean that we are trying to control your faith. You are strong in faith. But we are workers with you for your own happiness.

So I decided that my next visit to you would not be another visit to make you sad. If I make you sad, who will make me happy? Only you can make me happy—you whom I made sad. I wrote you a letter for this reason: that when I came to you I would not be made sad by the people who should make me happy. I felt sure of all of you. I felt sure that you would share my joy. When I wrote to you before, I was very troubled and unhappy in my heart. I wrote with many tears. I did not write to make you sad, but to let you know how much I love you.

Forgive the Sinner

Someone there among you has caused sadness. He caused this not to me, but to all of you—I mean he caused sadness to all in some way. (I do not want to make it sound worse than it really is.) The punishment that most of you gave him is enough for him. But now you should forgive him and comfort him. This will keep him from having too much sadness and giving up completely. So I beg you to show him that you love him. This is why I wrote to you. I wanted to test you and see if you obey in everything. 10 If you forgive someone, I also forgive him. And what I have forgiven—if I had anything to forgive—I forgave it for you, and Christ was with me. 11 I did this so that Satan would not win anything from us. We know very well what Satan’s plans are.

Mark 12:1-11

God Sends His Son

12 Jesus used stories to teach the people. He said, “A man planted a vineyard. He put a wall around it and dug a hole for a winepress. Then he built a tower. He leased the vineyard to some farmers and left for a trip. Later, it was time for the grapes to be picked. So the man sent a servant to the farmers to get his share of the grapes. But the farmers grabbed the servant and beat him. They sent him away with nothing. Then the man sent another servant. They hit him on the head and showed no respect for him. So the man sent another servant. They killed this servant. The man sent many other servants. The farmers beat some of them and killed others.

“The man had one person left to send, his son whom he loved. He sent him last of all, saying, ‘The farmers will respect my son.’

“But they said to each other, ‘This is the owner’s son. This vineyard will be his. If we kill him, then it will be ours.’ So they took the son, killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard.

“So what will the man who owns the vineyard do? He will go to the vineyard and kill those farmers. Then he will give the vineyard to other farmers. 10 Surely you have read this Scripture:

‘The stone that the builders did not want
    became the cornerstone.
11 The Lord did this,
    and it is wonderful to us.’” Psalm 118:22-23

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

The Holy Bible, International Children’s Bible® Copyright© 1986, 1988, 1999, 2015 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission.