Imprimir Opciones de la página
Anterior Día anterior Día siguienteSiguiente

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
Job 32-33

Elihu Adds to the Argument

32 Then Job’s three friends gave up trying to answer him, because he was so sure that he was innocent. But there was a young man there named Elihu son of Barakel. He was a descendant of a man named Buz. Elihu was from the family of Ram. He became very angry because Job kept saying he was innocent—that he was right and God was wrong. Elihu was also angry with Job’s three friends because they could not answer him, and yet they still considered him guilty of doing wrong. Elihu was the youngest one there, so he had waited until everyone finished talking. But when he saw that Job’s three friends had nothing more to say, his anger forced him to speak. So here’s what Elihu son of Barakel the Buzite said:

“I am only a young man, and you are all older.
    That is why I was afraid to tell you what I think.
I thought to myself, ‘Older people should speak first.
    They have lived many years, so they have learned many things.’
But it is the spirit in people, the breath from God All-Powerful,
    that makes them understand.
Old men are not the only wise people.
    They are not the only ones who understand what is right.

10 “So please listen to me,
    and I will tell you what I think.
11 I waited patiently while you men talked.
    I listened to the answers you gave as you searched for the right words.
12 I listened carefully to what you said.
    Not one of you proved Job wrong.
    Not one of you answered his arguments.
13 You men cannot say that you have found wisdom.
    The answer to Job’s arguments must come from God, not people.
14 Job was arguing with you, not me,
    so I will not use your arguments to answer him.

15 “Job, these men lost the argument.
    They don’t have anything more to say.
    They don’t have any more answers.
16 I waited for them to answer you.
    But now they are quiet.
    They stand there with nothing more to say.
17 So now I will give you my answer.
    Yes, I will tell you what I think.
18 I have so much to say
    that I cannot hold it in.
19 I feel like a jar of wine that has never been opened.
    I am like a new wineskin ready to burst.
20 I must speak so that I will feel better.
    I must answer your arguments.
21 I will treat you the same as I would treat anyone else.
    I will not praise you to win your favor.
22 I cannot treat one person better than another.
    If I did, God my Maker would punish me!

33 “Now, Job, listen to me.
    Listen carefully to what I say.
I am ready to speak.
My heart is honest, so my words are sincere.
    I will speak the truth about what I know.
God’s Spirit made me.
    My life comes from God All-Powerful.
Listen to me and answer if you can.
    Get your arguments ready to face me.
You and I are the same before God.
    He used clay to make us both.
Don’t be afraid of me.
    I will not be hard on you.

“But, Job, I heard what you said.
    These were your very words:
‘I am pure and innocent;
    I did nothing wrong; I am not guilty!
10 But God found an excuse to attack me.
    He treats me like an enemy.
11 He put chains on my feet
    and watches everything I do.’

12 “But you are wrong about this, and I will prove it to you.
    God knows more than any of us.[a]
13 You are arguing with God!
    Why do you think he should explain everything to you?
14 But maybe God does explain what he does
    but speaks in ways that people don’t understand.
15 He may speak in a dream, or in a vision at night,
    when people are in a deep sleep lying in their beds.
16 He may whisper something in their ear,
    and they are frightened when they hear his warnings.
17 God warns people to stop them from doing wrong
    and to keep them from becoming proud.
18 He does this to save them from death.[b]
    He wants to keep them from being destroyed.

19 “Or those who are sick in bed might be suffering punishment from God.
    The pain that makes their bones ache might be a warning from him.
20 They feel so bad they cannot eat.
    Even the best food makes them sick.
21 Their bodies might waste away until they become thin
    and all their bones stick out.
22 They might be close to death,
    their lives about to end.
23 But maybe one of God’s thousands of angels is watching over them,
    to speak for them and tell about the good things they have done.
24 Maybe the angel will be kind and say to God,
    ‘Save this one from the place of death!
    I have found a way to pay for his life.’
25 Then that person’s body will become young and strong again.
    He will be as he was when he was young.
26 He will pray and God will answer.
    He will worship God and shout with joy.
    He will again stand as right before God.
27 He will tell everyone, ‘I sinned.
    I changed good into bad,
    but God didn’t give me the punishment I deserved!
28 God saved me from going down to the place of death.
    Now I can enjoy life again.’

29 “God does all these things for people again and again.
30 He wants them to be saved from death
    so that they can enjoy life.

31 “Job, pay attention and listen to me.
    Be quiet and let me talk.
32 But if you have an answer, go ahead and speak.
    Tell me your argument.
    I would be happy to know that you are innocent!
33 But if you have nothing to say, then listen to me.
    Be quiet, and I will teach you wisdom.”

Acts 14

Paul and Barnabas in Iconium

14 Paul and Barnabas went to the city of Iconium. As they did in Antioch, they entered the Jewish synagogue. They spoke to the people there. They spoke so well that many Jews and Greeks believed what they said. But some of the Jews did not believe. They said things that caused the non-Jewish people to be angry and turn against the believers.

So Paul and Barnabas stayed in Iconium a long time, and they spoke bravely for the Lord. They told the people about God’s grace. The Lord proved that what they said was true by causing miraculous signs and wonders to be done through them. But some of the people in the city agreed with the Jews who did not believe Paul and Barnabas. Others followed the apostles. So the city was divided.

Some of the Jews there, as well as their leaders and some of the non-Jewish people, were determined to hurt Paul and Barnabas. They wanted to stone them to death. When Paul and Barnabas learned about this, they left the city. They went to Lystra and Derbe, cities in Lycaonia, and to the surrounding areas. They told the Good News there too.

Paul in Lystra and Derbe

In Lystra there was a man who had something wrong with his feet. He had been born crippled and had never walked. He was sitting and listening to Paul speak. Paul looked straight at him and saw that the man believed God could heal him. 10 So Paul shouted, “Stand up on your feet!” The man jumped up and began walking around.

11 When the people saw what Paul did, they shouted in their own Lycaonian language. They said, “The gods have come down to us in the form of humans!” 12 The people began to call Barnabas “Zeus,” and they called Paul “Hermes,” because he was the main speaker. 13 The temple of Zeus was near the city. The priest of this temple brought some bulls and flowers to the city gates. The priest and the people wanted to offer a sacrifice to Paul and Barnabas.

14 But when the apostles, Barnabas and Paul, understood what the people were doing, they tore their own clothes.[a] Then they ran in among the people and shouted to them: 15 “Men, why are you doing this? We are not gods. We are human just like you. We came to tell you the Good News. We are telling you to turn away from these worthless things. Turn to the true living God, the one who made the sky, the earth, the sea, and everything that is in them.

16 “In the past God let all the nations do what they wanted. 17 But God was always there doing the good things that prove he is real. He gives you rain from heaven and good harvests at the right times. He gives you plenty of food and fills your hearts with joy.”

18 Even after saying all this, Paul and Barnabas still could hardly stop the people from offering sacrifices to them.

19 Then some Jews came from Antioch and Iconium and persuaded the people to turn against Paul. So they threw stones at him and dragged him out of the town. They thought they had killed him. 20 But when the followers of Jesus gathered around him, he got up and went back into the town. The next day he and Barnabas left and went to the city of Derbe.

The Return to Antioch in Syria

21 They also told the Good News in the city of Derbe, and many people became followers of Jesus. Then Paul and Barnabas returned to the cities of Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch. 22 In those cities they helped the followers grow stronger in their faith and encouraged them to continue trusting God. They told them, “We must suffer many things on our way into God’s kingdom.” 23 They also chose elders for each church and stopped eating for a period of time to pray for them. These elders were men who had put their trust in the Lord Jesus, so Paul and Barnabas put them in his care.

24 Paul and Barnabas went through the country of Pisidia. Then they came to the country of Pamphylia. 25 They told people the message of God in the city of Perga, and then they went down to the city of Attalia. 26 And from there they sailed away to Antioch in Syria. This is the city where the believers had put them into God’s care and sent them to do this work. Now they had finished it.

27 When Paul and Barnabas arrived, they gathered the church together. They told them everything God had used them to do. They said, “God opened a door for the non-Jewish people to believe!” 28 And they stayed there a long time with the Lord’s followers.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International