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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 72-73

To Solomon.[a]

72 God, help the king be like you and make fair decisions.
    Help the king’s son know what justice is.
Help the king judge your people fairly.
    Help him make wise decisions for your poor people.
Let there be peace and justice throughout the land,
    known on every mountain and hill.
May the king be fair to the poor.
    May he help the helpless and punish those who hurt them.
May people always fear and respect you, God,
    as long as the sun shines and the moon is in the sky.
Help the king be like rain falling on the fields,
    like showers falling on the land.
Let goodness grow everywhere while he is king.
    Let peace continue as long as there is a moon.
Let his kingdom grow from sea to sea,
    from the Euphrates River to the faraway places on earth.[b]
May all the people living in the desert bow down to him.
    May all his enemies bow before him with their faces in the dirt.
10 May the kings of Tarshish and all the faraway lands by the sea bring gifts to him.
    May the kings of Sheba and Seba bring their tribute to him.
11 May all kings bow down to our king.
    May all nations serve him.
12 Our king helps the poor who cry out to him—
    those in need who have no one to help them.
13 He feels sorry for all who are weak and poor.
    He protects their lives.
14 He saves them from the cruel people who try to hurt them.
    Their lives are important to him.
15 Long live the king!
    Let him receive gold from Sheba.
Always pray for the king.
    Ask God to bless him every day.
16 May the fields grow plenty of grain
    and the hills be covered with crops.
May the fields be as fertile as Lebanon,
    and may people fill the cities as grass covers a field.
17 May the king be famous forever.
    May people remember his name as long as the sun shines.
May all nations be blessed through him,
    and may they all bless him.

18 Praise the Lord God, the God of Israel!
    Only he can do such amazing things.
19 Praise his glorious name forever!
    Let his glory fill the whole world.
Amen and Amen!

20 (This ends the prayers of David son of Jesse.)

Book 3

(Psalms 73-89)

Asaph’s song of praise.

73 God is so good to Israel,
    to those whose hearts are pure.
But I almost slipped and lost my balance.
    I almost fell into sin.
I saw that wicked people were successful,
    and I became jealous of those proud people.
They are healthy.
    They don’t have to struggle to survive.[c]
They don’t suffer like the rest of us.
    They don’t have troubles like other people.
So they are proud and hateful.
    This is as easy to see as the jewels and fancy clothes they wear.
If they see something they like, they go and take it.
    They do whatever they want.
They make fun of others and say cruel things about them.
    In their pride they make plans to hurt people.
They think they are gods!
    They think they are the rulers of the earth.
10 [d] Even God’s people turn to them
    and do what they say.
11 Those evil people say, “God does not know what we are doing!
    God Most High does not know!”

12 Those proud people are wicked,
    but they are rich and getting richer.
13 Clearly, then, I gain nothing by keeping my thoughts pure!
    What good is it to keep myself from sin?
14 God, I suffer all day long,
    and you punish me every morning.

15 I wanted to tell others these things,
    but that would have made me a traitor to your people.
16 I tried hard to understand all this,
    but it was too hard for me.
17 But then, God, I went to your Temple,
    and I understood what will happen to the wicked.
18 Clearly, you have put them in danger.
    You make it easy for them to fall and be destroyed.
19 Trouble can come suddenly,
    and they will be ruined.
Terrible things can happen to them,
    and they will be finished.
20 Then they will be like a dream
    that we forget when we wake up.
You will make them disappear
    like the monsters in our dreams.

21-22 I was so stupid.
    I thought about such people and became upset.
God, I was upset and angry with you!
    I acted like a senseless animal.
23 But I am always with you.
    You hold my hand.
24 You lead me and give me good advice,
    and later you will lead me to glory.[e]
25 In heaven, God, I have only you.
    And if I am with you, what on earth could I want?
26 Maybe my mind[f] and body will become weak,
    but God is my source of strength.[g]
    He is mine forever!
27 God, people who leave you will be lost.
    You will destroy all who are not faithful to you.
28 As for me, all I need is to be close to God.
    I have made the Lord God my place of safety.
    And, God, I will tell about all that you have done.

Romans 9:1-15

God and the Jewish People

I am in Christ and I am telling you the truth. I am not lying. And my conscience, ruled by the Holy Spirit, agrees that what I say now is true. I have great sorrow and always feel much sadness for my own people. They are my brothers and sisters, my earthly family. I wish I could help them. I would even have a curse on me and cut myself off from Christ if that would help them. They are the people of Israel, God’s chosen children. They have the glory of God and the agreements he made between himself and his people. God gave them the Law of Moses, the Temple worship, and his promises. They are the descendants of our great fathers, and they are the earthly family of the Messiah, who is God over all things. Praise him forever![a] Amen.

I don’t mean that God failed to keep his promise to the Jewish people. But only some of the people of Israel are really God’s people.[b] And only some of Abraham’s descendants are true children of Abraham. This is what God said to Abraham: “Your true descendants will be those who come through Isaac.”[c] This means that not all of Abraham’s descendants are God’s true children. Abraham’s true children are those who become God’s children because of the promise he made to Abraham. Here is what God said in that promise: “About this time next year I will come back, and Sarah will have a son.”[d]

10 And that is not all. Rebecca also had sons, and they had the same father. He is our father Isaac. 11-12 But before the two sons were born, God told Rebecca, “The older son will serve the younger.”[e] This was before the boys had done anything good or bad. God said this before they were born so that the boy he wanted would be chosen because of God’s own plan. He was chosen because he was the one God wanted to call, not because of anything the boys did. 13 As the Scriptures say, “I loved Jacob, but I hated Esau.”[f]

14 So what does this mean? That God is not fair? We cannot say that. 15 God said to Moses, “I will show mercy to anyone I want to show mercy to. I will show pity to anyone I choose.”[g]

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International