Print Page Options
Previous Prev Day Next DayNext

Old/New Testament

Each day includes a passage from both the Old Testament and New Testament.
Duration: 365 days
International Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Psalm 77-78

Remembering God’s Help

For the director of music. For Jeduthun. A song of Asaph.

77 I cry out loud to God.
    I call to God, and he will hear me.
I looked for the Lord on the day of trouble.
    All night long I reached out my hands.
    I cannot be comforted.
When I remember God, I become upset.
    When I think, I become afraid. Selah

You keep my eyes from closing.
    I am too upset to say anything.
I keep thinking about the old days,
    the years of long ago.
At night I remember my songs.
    I think, and I ask myself:
“Will the Lord reject us forever?
    Will he never be kind to us again?
Is his love gone forever?
    Has he stopped speaking for all time?
Has God forgotten mercy?
    Is he too angry to pity us?” Selah
10 Then I said, “This is what makes me sad:
    For years the power of God Most High was with us.”

11 I remember what the Lord did.
    I remember the miracles you did long ago.
12 I think about all the things you did.
    I think about what you have done.

13 God, your ways are holy.
    No god is as great as our God.
14 You are the God who did miracles.
    You showed people your power.
15 By your power you have saved your people,
    the descendants of Jacob and Joseph. Selah

16 God, the waters saw you.
    They saw you and became afraid.
    The deep waters shook with fear.
17 The clouds poured down their rain.
    The sky thundered.
    Your lightning flashed back and forth.
18 Your thunder sounded in the whirlwind.
    Lightning lit up the world.
    The earth trembled and shook.
19 You made a way through the sea
    and paths through the deep waters.
    But your footprints were not seen.
20 You led your people like a flock of sheep.
    You led them by using Moses and Aaron.

God Saved Israel from Egypt

A maskil of Asaph.

78 My people, listen to my teaching.
    Listen to what I say.
I will speak using stories.
    I will tell things that have been secret since long ago.
We have heard them and know them.
    Our fathers told them to us.
We will not keep them from our children.
    We will tell those who come later
    about the praises of the Lord.
We will tell about his power
    and the miracles he has done.

The Lord made an agreement with Jacob.
    He gave the teachings to Israel.
And he commanded our ancestors
    to teach them to their children.
Then their children would know them,
    even their children not yet born.
    And they would tell their children.
So they would all trust God.
    They would not forget what God had done.
    Instead, they would obey his commands.
They would not be like their ancestors
    who were stubborn and disobedient.
Their hearts were not loyal to God.
    They were not true to him.

The men of Ephraim had bows for weapons.
    But they ran away on the day of battle.
10 They didn’t keep their agreement with God.
    They refused to live by his teachings.
11 They forgot what he had done
    and the miracles he had shown them.
12 He did miracles while their ancestors watched,
    in the fields of Zoan in Egypt.
13 He divided the Red Sea and led them through.
    He made the water stand up like a wall.
14 He led them with a cloud by day.
    And he led them at night by the light of a fire.
15 He split the rocks in the desert.
    And he gave them much water, as if it were from the deep ocean.
16 He brought streams out of the rock.
    The water flowed down like rivers.

17 But the people continued to sin against him.
    In the desert they turned against God Most High.
18 They decided to test God
    by asking for the food they wanted.
19 Then they spoke against God.
    They said, “Can God prepare food in the desert?
20 When he hit the rock, water poured out.
    Rivers flowed down.
But can he give us bread also?
    Will he provide his people with meat?”
21 When the Lord heard them, he was very angry.
    His anger was like fire to the people of Jacob.
    His anger grew against the people of Israel.
22 They had not believed God.
    They had not trusted him to save them.
23 But he gave a command to the clouds above.
    The doors of heaven opened.
24 He rained manna down on them to eat.
    He gave them grain from heaven.
25 So they ate the bread of angels.
    He sent them all the food they could eat.
26 He sent the east wind from heaven.
    He led the south wind by his power.
27 He rained meat on them like dust.
    The birds were as many as the sand of the sea.
28 He made the birds fall inside the camp,
    all around the tents.
29 So the people ate and became very full.
    God had given them what they wanted.
30 While they were still eating,
    and while the food was still in their mouths,
31 God became angry with them.
    He killed some of the healthiest of them.
    He struck down the best young men of Israel.

32 But they kept on sinning.
    They did not believe even with the miracles.
33 So he ended their days without meaning
    and their years in terror.
34 Anytime he killed them, some would look to him for help.
    They would come back to God and follow him.
35 They would remember that God was their Rock,
    that God Most High had saved them.
36 But their words were false.
    Their tongues lied to him.
37 Their hearts were not really loyal to God.
    They did not keep his agreement.
38 Still God was merciful.
    He forgave their sins.
    He did not destroy them.
Many times he held back his anger.
    He did not stir up all his anger.
39 He remembered that they were only human.
    They were like a wind that blows and does not come back.

40 They turned against God so often in the desert!
    There they made him very sad.
41 Again and again they tested God.
    They brought pain to the Holy One of Israel.
42 They did not remember his power
    or the time he saved them from the enemy.
43 They forgot the signs he did in Egypt
    and his miracles in the fields of Zoan.
44 He turned the rivers to blood.
    So no one could drink the water.
45 He sent flies that bit the people.
    He sent frogs that destroyed them.
46 He gave their crops to grasshoppers
    and what they worked for to locusts.
47 He destroyed their vines with hail
    and their sycamore trees with sleet.
48 He killed their animals with hail
    and their cattle with lightning.
49 He showed them his hot anger.
    He sent his strong anger against them.
    He sent his destroying angels.
50 He found a way to show his anger.
    He did not keep them from dying.
    He let them die by a terrible disease.
51 God killed all the firstborn sons in Egypt,
    the oldest son of each family of Ham.[a]
52 But God led out his people like sheep.
    He guided them like a flock through the desert.
53 He led them to safety. They had nothing to fear.
    But their enemies drowned in the sea.
54 So God brought them to his holy land.
    He brought them to the mountain country he took with his own power.
55 He forced out the other nations.
    And he had his people inherit the land.
    He let the tribes of Israel settle there in tents.

56 But they tested God
    and turned against the Most High.
    They did not keep his rules.
57 They turned away and sinned just like their ancestors.
    They were like a crooked bow that does not shoot straight.
58 They made God angry by building places to worship false gods.
    They made him jealous with their idols.
59 When God heard them, he became very angry.
    And he rejected the people of Israel completely.
60 He left his dwelling at Shiloh,
    the tent where he lived among men.
61 He let his Ark of the Covenant be captured.
    He let the Ark of the Covenant, which was his glory, be taken by enemies.
62 He let his people be killed.
    He was very angry with his children.
63 The young men died by fire.
    The young women had no one to marry.
64 Their priests fell by the sword.
    But their widows were not allowed to cry.

65 Then the Lord got up as if he had been asleep.
    He awoke like a man who was drunk with wine.
66 He struck down his enemies.
    He disgraced them forever.
67 But God rejected the family of Joseph.
    He did not choose the tribe of Ephraim.
68 Instead, he chose the tribe of Judah
    and Mount Zion, which he loves.
69 And he built his Temple high like the mountains.
    Like the earth, he built it to last forever.
70 He chose David to be his servant.
    He took him from the sheep pens.
71 He brought him from tending the sheep
    so he could lead the flock, the people of Jacob.
    This flock was his own people, the people of Israel.
72 And David led them with an innocent heart.
    He guided them with skillful hands.

Romans 10

10 Brothers, the thing I want most is for all the Jews to be saved. That is my prayer to God. I can say this about them: They really try to follow God. But they do not know the right way. They did not know the way that God makes people right with him. And they tried to make themselves right in their own way. So they did not accept God’s way of making people right. Christ ended the law, so that everyone who believes in him may be right with God.

Moses writes about being made right by following the law. He says, “A person who does these things will have life forever because of them.”[a] But this is what the Scripture says about being made right through faith: “Don’t say to yourself, ‘Who will go up into heaven?’” (That means, “Who will go up to heaven to get Christ and bring him down to earth?”) “And do not say, ‘Who will go down into the world below?’” (That means, “Who will go down to get Christ and bring him up from death?”) This is what the Scripture says: “God’s teaching is near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart.”[b] That is the teaching of faith that we tell. If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and if you believe in your heart that God raised Jesus from death, then you will be saved. 10 We believe with our hearts, and so we are made right with God. And we declare with our mouths to say that we believe, and so we are saved. 11 As the Scripture says, “Anyone who trusts in him will never be disappointed.”[c] 12 That Scripture says “anyone” because there is no difference between Jew and non-Jew. The same Lord is the Lord of all and gives many blessings to all who trust in him. 13 The Scripture says, “Anyone who asks the Lord for help will be saved.”[d]

14 But before people can trust in the Lord for help, they must believe in him. And before they can believe in the Lord, they must hear about him. And for them to hear about the Lord, someone must tell them. 15 And before someone can go and tell them, he must be sent. It is written, “How beautiful is the person who comes to bring good news.”[e]

16 But not all the Jews accepted the good news. Isaiah said, “Lord, who believed what we told them?”[f] 17 So faith comes from hearing the Good News. And people hear the Good News when someone tells them about Christ.

18 But I ask: Didn’t people hear the Good News? Yes, they heard—as the Scripture says:

“Their message went out through all the world.
    It goes everywhere on earth.” Psalm 19:4

19 Again I ask: Didn’t the people of Israel understand? Yes, they did understand. First, Moses says:

“I will use those who are not a nation to make you jealous.
    I will use a nation that does not understand to make you angry.” Deuteronomy 32:21

20 Then Isaiah is bold enough to say:

“I was found by those who were not asking me for help.
    I made myself known to people who were not looking for me.” Isaiah 65:1

21 But about Israel God says,

“All day long I stood ready to accept
    people who disobey and are stubborn.” Isaiah 65:2

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

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