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Old/New Testament

Each day includes a passage from both the Old Testament and New Testament.
Duration: 365 days
Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)
Version
Psalm 10-12

10 Lord, why do you stay so far away?
    Why do you hide from people in times of trouble?
The wicked are proud and make evil plans to hurt the poor,
    who are caught in their traps and made to suffer.
Those greedy people brag about the things they want to get.
    They curse the Lord and show that they hate him.
The wicked are too proud to ask God for help.
    He does not fit into their plans.
They succeed in everything they do.
    They don’t understand how you can judge them.
    They make fun of all their enemies.
They say to themselves, “Nothing bad will ever happen to us.
    We will have our fun and never be punished.”
They are always cursing, lying,
    and planning evil things to do.
They hide just outside the villages,
    waiting to kill innocent people,
    always looking for any helpless person they can hurt.
They are like lions hiding in the bushes
    to catch weak and helpless animals.
They lay their traps for the poor,
    who are caught in their nets.
10 Again and again they hurt people
    who are already weak and suffering.
11 They say to themselves, “God has forgotten about us.
    He is not watching.
    He will never see what we are doing.”

12 Lord, get up and do something.
    Punish those who are wicked, God.
    Don’t forget those who are poor and helpless.

13 The wicked turn against God
    because they think he will not punish them.
14 But, Lord, you do see the pain and suffering they cause.
    You see it, so punish them.
Those who were left helpless put their trust in you.
    After all, you are the one who cares for orphans.

15 Break the arms of those who are wicked and evil.
    Punish them for the evil they have done,
    and stop them from doing any more.
16 Lord, you are King forever and ever,
    so I know you will remove the wicked nations from your land.
17 Lord, you have heard what the poor want.
    Listen to their prayers, and do what they ask.
18 Protect the orphans and those who have been hurt.
    Don’t let powerful people drive us from our land!

To the director: A song of David.

11 I trust in the Lord, so why did you tell me to run and hide?
    Why did you say, “Fly like a bird to your mountain?”

Like hunters, the wicked hide in the dark.
    They get their bows ready and aim their arrows.
    They shoot at good, honest people.
What would good people do
    if the wicked destroyed all that is good?[a]

The Lord is in his holy temple.
    The Lord sits on his throne in heaven.
He sees everything that happens.
    He watches people closely.
The Lord examines those who are good and those who are wicked;
    he hates those who enjoy hurting others.
He will make hot coals and burning sulfur fall like rain on the wicked.
    They will get nothing but a hot, burning wind.
The Lord always does what is right, and he loves seeing people do right.
    Those who live good lives will be with him.[b]

To the director: With the sheminith. A song of David.

12 Save me, Lord!
    We can no longer trust anyone!
    All the good, loyal people are gone.
People lie to their neighbors.
    They say whatever they think people want to hear.
The Lord should cut off their lying lips
    and cut out their bragging tongues.
Those people think they can win any argument.
They say, “We are so good with words,
    no one will be our master.”

They took advantage of the poor
    and stole what little they had.
But the Lord knows what they did, and he says,
    “I will rescue those who are poor and helpless,
    and I will punish those who hurt them.”[c]

The Lord’s words are true and pure,
    like silver purified by fire,
    like silver melted seven times to make it perfectly pure.

Lord, take care of the helpless.
    Protect them forever from the wicked people in this world.
The wicked are all around us,
    and everyone thinks evil is something to be praised!

Acts 19:1-20

Paul in Ephesus

19 While Apollos was in the city of Corinth, Paul was visiting some places on his way to Ephesus. In Ephesus he found some other followers of the Lord. He asked them, “Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?”

These followers said to him, “We have never even heard of a Holy Spirit!”

Paul asked them, “So what kind of baptism did you have?”

They said, “It was the baptism that John taught.”

Paul said, “John told people to be baptized to show they wanted to change their lives. He told people to believe in the one who would come after him, and that one is Jesus.”

When these followers heard this, they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. Then Paul laid his hands on them, and the Holy Spirit came on them. They began speaking different languages and prophesying. There were about twelve men in this group.

Paul went into the synagogue and spoke very boldly. He continued doing this for three months. He talked with the Jews, trying to persuade them to accept what he was telling them about God’s kingdom. But some of them became stubborn and refused to believe. In front of everyone, they said bad things about the Way. So Paul left these Jews and took the Lord’s followers with him. He went to a place where a man named Tyrannus had a school. There Paul talked with people every day. 10 He did this for two years. Because of this work, everyone in Asia, Jews and Greeks, heard the word of the Lord.

The Sons of Sceva

11 God used Paul to do some very special miracles. 12 Some people carried away handkerchiefs and clothes that Paul had used and put them on those who were sick. The sick people were healed, and evil spirits left them.

13-14 Some Jews also were traveling around forcing evil spirits out of people. The seven sons of Sceva, one of the leading priests, were doing this. These Jews tried to use the name of the Lord Jesus to make the evil spirits go out of people. They all said, “By the same Jesus that Paul talks about, I order you to come out!”

15 But one time an evil spirit said to these Jews, “I know Jesus, and I know about Paul, but who are you?”

16 Then the man who had the evil spirit inside him jumped on these Jews. He was much stronger than all of them. He beat them up and tore their clothes off. They all ran away from that house.

17 All the people in Ephesus, Jews and Greeks, learned about this. They were all filled with fear and gave great honor to the Lord Jesus. 18 Many of the believers began to confess, telling about all the evil things they had done. 19 Some of them had used magic. These believers brought their magic books and burned them before everyone. These books were worth about 50,000 silver coins.[a] 20 This is how the word of the Lord was spreading in a powerful way, causing more and more people to believe.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International