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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 102

Psalm 102

A prayer by someone who is suffering, when he is weary and pours out his troubles in Yahweh’s presence.

O Yahweh, hear my prayer,
    and let my cry for help come to you.
Do not hide your face from me when I am in trouble.
    Turn your ear toward me.
        Answer me quickly when I call.
My days disappear like smoke.
    My bones burn like hot coals.
My heart is beaten down and withered like grass
    because I have forgotten about eating.
I am nothing but skin and bones
    because of my loud groans.
I am like a desert owl,
    like an owl living in the ruins.
I lie awake.
    I am like a lonely bird on a rooftop.
All day long my enemies insult me.
    Those who ridicule me use my name as a curse.
I eat ashes like bread
    and my tears are mixed with my drink
10 because of your hostility and anger,
    because you have picked me up and thrown me away.
11 My days are like a shadow that is getting longer,
    and I wither away like grass.

12 But you, O Yahweh, remain forever.
    You are remembered throughout every generation.
13 You will rise and have compassion on Zion,
    because it is time to grant a favor to it.
        Indeed, the appointed time has come.
14 Your servants value Zion’s stones,
    and they pity its rubble.
15 The nations will fear Yahweh’s name.
    All the kings of the earth will fear your glory.
16 When Yahweh builds Zion,
    he will appear in his glory.
17 He will turn his attention to the prayers
    of those who have been abandoned.
    He will not despise their prayers.
18 This will be written down for a future generation
    so that a people yet to be created may praise Yah:
19 Yahweh looked down from his holy place high above.
    From heaven he looked at the earth.
20 He heard the groans of the prisoners
    and set free those who were condemned to death.
21 Yahweh’s name is announced in Zion
    and his praise in Jerusalem
22 when nations and kingdoms gather
    to worship Yahweh.”

23 He has weakened my strength along the way.
    He has reduced the number of my days.
24 I said, “My El, don’t take me now in the middle of my life.
    Your years continue on throughout every generation.
25 Long ago you laid the foundation of the earth.
    Even the heavens are the works of your hands.
26 They will come to an end, but you will still go on.
    They will all wear out like clothing.
        You will change them like clothes,
            and they will be thrown away.
27 But you remain the same, and your life will never end.
28 The children of your servants will go on living here.
    Their descendants will be secure in your presence.”

Psalm 107:1-32

BOOK FIVE

(Psalms 107–150)

Psalm 107

Give thanks to Yahweh because he is good,
    because his mercy endures forever.

Let the people Yahweh defended repeat these words.
    They are the people he defended from the power of their enemies
        and gathered from other countries,
            from the east and from the west,
            from the north and from the south.
They wandered around the desert on a deserted road
    without finding an inhabited city.
They were hungry and thirsty.
    They began to lose hope.
In their distress they cried out to Yahweh.
    He rescued them from their troubles.
He led them on a road that went straight to an inhabited city.

Let them give thanks to Yahweh because of his mercy.
    He performed his miracles for Adam’s descendants.
He gave plenty to drink to those who were thirsty.
    He filled those who were hungry with good food.
10 Those who lived in the dark, in death’s shadow
    were prisoners in misery.
        They were held in iron chains
11 because they had rebelled against El’s words
    and had despised the advice given by Elyon.
12 So he humbled them with hard work.
    They fell down, but no one was there to help them.
13 In their distress they cried out to Yahweh.
    He saved them from their troubles.
14 He brought them out of the dark, out of death’s shadow.
    He broke apart their chains.

15 Let them give thanks to Yahweh because of his mercy.
    He performed his miracles for Adam’s descendants.
16 He shattered bronze gates
    and cut iron bars in two.
17 Fools suffered because of their disobedience
    and because of their crimes.
18 All food was disgusting to them,
    and they came near death’s gates.
19 In their distress they cried out to Yahweh.
    He saved them from their troubles.
20 He sent his message and healed them.
    He rescued them from the grave.

21 Let them give thanks to Yahweh because of his mercy.
    He performed his miracles for Adam’s descendants.
22 Let them bring songs of thanksgiving as their sacrifice.
    Let them tell in joyful songs what he has done.
23 Those who sail on the sea in ships,
    who do business on the high seas,
24 have seen what Yahweh can do,
    the miracles he performed in the depths of the sea.
25 He spoke, and a storm began to blow,
    and it made the waves rise high.
26 The sailors aboard ship rose toward the sky.
    They plunged into the depths.
        Their courage melted in the face of disaster.
27 They reeled and staggered like drunks,
    and all their skills as sailors became useless.
28 In their distress they cried out to Yahweh.
    He led them from their troubles.
29 He made the storm calm down,
    and the waves became still.
30 The sailors were glad that the storm was quiet.
    He guided them to the harbor they had longed for.

31 Let them give thanks to Yahweh because of his mercy.
    He performed his miracles for Adam’s descendants.
32 Let them glorify him when the people are gathered for worship.
    Let them praise him in the company of respected leaders.

Judges 14:20-15

20 Samson’s wife was given to his best man.

Samson Serves as Judge

15 Later, during the wheat harvest, Samson went to visit his wife. He took a young goat along for her. He said, “I’m going to sleep with my wife in her bedroom.”

But her father would not let him go in. Her father said, “I thought you hated her. So I gave her to your best man. Isn’t her younger sister better looking? Marry her instead!”

Samson said to him, “This time I won’t be guilty when I get even with the Philistines, even though I’m going to do something terrible to them.” So Samson caught 300 foxes. He tied them together in pairs by their tails. Then he fastened a torch between their tails. He set the torches on fire and released the foxes in the Philistines’ grain fields. So he set fire to all their grain, whether it was stacked or in the fields. Their olive orchards also caught on fire.

Some Philistines asked, “Who did this?”

They were told, “Samson! He’s the son-in-law of the man at Timnah. Samson did it because the man at Timnah took Samson’s wife and gave her to his best man.” So the Philistines burned Samson’s wife and her father to death.

Samson said to them, “If that’s how you’re going to act, I’ll get even with you before I stop.” So he attacked them violently and slaughtered them. Then he went to live in a cave in the cliff at Etam.

The Philistines came, camped in Judah, and overran Lehi. 10 The men of Judah asked, “Why did you come to fight us?”

The Philistines answered, “We’ve come to tie up Samson and do to him what he did to us.”

11 So 3,000 men from Judah went to the cave in the cliff at Etam. They said to Samson, “Don’t you know that the Philistines rule us? Why have you done this to us?”

Samson replied, “I did to them what they did to me.”

12 So the men from Judah told him, “We’ve come to tie you up and hand you over to the Philistines.”

Samson said to them, “Swear to me that you won’t harm me yourselves.”

13 They told him, “We promise we’ll only tie you up and hand you over to them. We certainly won’t kill you.” So they tied him up with two new ropes and brought him back from the cliff.

14 When he came to Lehi, the Philistines met him with shouts of triumph. But the Ruach Yahweh came over him. The ropes on his arms became like strings burned in a fire, and those on his hands snapped.

15 Samson found the jawbone from a donkey that had just died. He picked it up and killed 1,000 men with it. 16 Then Samson said,

“With a jawbone from a donkey,
I’ve made two piles of them.
With a jawbone from a donkey,
I’ve killed a thousand men.”

17 When he finished saying this, he threw the jawbone away. He called that place Ramath Lehi [Jawbone Hill].

18 Samson was very thirsty. So he called out to Yahweh and said, “You have given me this great victory. But now I’ll die from thirst and fall into the power of godless men.”

19 So Elohim split open the hollow place at Lehi, and water gushed out. Samson drank some water. Then he was refreshed and revived. So he called the place En Hakkore [Spring of the One Who Calls Out]. It is still there at Lehi today.

20 Samson judged Israel for 20 years during the time of the Philistines.

Acts 7:17-29

17 “When the time that God had promised to Abraham had almost come, the number of our people in Egypt had grown very large. 18 Then a different king, who knew nothing about Joseph, began to rule in Egypt. 19 This king was shrewd in the way he took advantage of our people. He mistreated our ancestors. He made them abandon their newborn babies outdoors, where they would die.

20 “At that time Moses was born, and he was a very beautiful child. His parents took care of him for three months. 21 When Moses was abandoned outdoors, Pharaoh’s daughter adopted him and raised him as her son. 22 So Moses was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians and became a great man in what he said and did. 23 When he was 40 years old, he decided to visit his own people, the Israelites. 24 When he saw an Israelite man being treated unfairly by an Egyptian, he defended the Israelite. He took revenge by killing the Egyptian. 25 Moses thought his own people would understand that God was going to use him to give them freedom. But they didn’t understand. 26 The next day Moses saw two Israelites fighting, and he tried to make peace between them. He said to them, ‘Men, you are brothers. Why are you treating each other unfairly?’

27 “But one of the men pushed Moses aside. He asked Moses, ‘Who made you our ruler and judge? 28 Do you want to kill me as you killed the Egyptian yesterday?’ 29 After he said that, Moses quickly left Egypt and lived in Midian as a foreigner. In Midian he fathered two sons.

John 4:43-54

A Believing Official(A)

43 After spending two days in Samaria, Yeshua left for Galilee. 44 Yeshua had said that a prophet is not honored in his own country. 45 But when Yeshua arrived in Galilee, the people of Galilee welcomed him. They had seen everything he had done at the festival in Jerusalem, since they, too, had attended the festival.

46 Yeshua returned to the city of Cana in Galilee, where he had changed water into wine. A government official was in Cana. His son was sick in Capernaum. 47 The official heard that Yeshua had returned from Judea to Galilee. So he went to Yeshua and asked him to go to Capernaum with him to heal his son who was about to die.

48 Yeshua told the official, “If people don’t see miracles and amazing things, they won’t believe.”

49 The official said to him, “Sir, come with me before my little boy dies.”

50 Yeshua told him, “Go home. Your son will live.” The man believed what Yeshua told him and left.

51 While the official was on his way to Capernaum, his servants met him and told him that his boy was alive. 52 The official asked them at what time his son got better. His servants told him, “The fever left him yesterday evening at seven o’clock.” 53 Then the boy’s father realized that it was the same time that Yeshua had told him, “Your son will live.” So the official and his entire family became believers.

54 This was the second miracle that Yeshua performed after he had come back from Judea to Galilee.

Names of God Bible (NOG)

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