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Revised Common Lectionary (Complementary)

Daily Bible readings that follow the church liturgical year, with thematically matched Old and New Testament readings.
Duration: 1245 days
The Voice (VOICE)
Version
Psalm 32:1-7

Psalm 32

A contemplative song[a] of David.

The psalms celebrate God’s forgiveness that comes through confession and repentance. Some interpreters link this psalm to David’s sin with Bathsheba after Nathan had exposed his transgression, but the king certainly had other failings. Even if we do not associate this psalm with any personal transgression by David, it serves well as a model confession for those who are painfully aware of their sin.

How happy is the one whose wrongs are forgiven,
    whose sin is hidden from sight.
How happy is the person whose sin the Eternal will not take into account.[b]
    How happy are those who no longer lie, to themselves or others.

When I refused to admit my wrongs, I was miserable,
    moaning and complaining all day long
    so that even my bones felt brittle.
Day and night, Your hand kept pressing on me.
    My strength dried up like water in the summer heat;
    You wore me down.

[pause][c]

When I finally saw my own lies,
    I owned up to my sins before You,
    and I did not try to hide my evil deeds from You.
I said to myself, “I’ll admit all my sins to the Eternal,”
    and You lifted and carried away the guilt of my sin.

[pause]

So let all who are devoted to You
    speak honestly to You now, while You are still listening.
For then when the floods come, surely the rushing water
    will not even reach them.
You are my hiding place.
    You will keep me out of trouble
    and envelop me with songs that remind me I am free.

[pause]

Job 22:21-23:17

21     Now be of use to God;
        be at peace with Him,
        and goodness will return to your life.
22     Receive instruction directly from His lips,
        and make His words a part of you.
23     If you return to the Highest One,
        you will be restored;
        if you banish the evil from your tents,
24     And consider your gold as common as earth’s dust
        and Ophir’s refined gold as plentiful as stones in rock-lined streams,
25     Then your true treasure will be the Highest One—
        worth more than gold and silver beyond measure.
26     For then, at last, you will find pleasure in the Highest One,
        and you will finally be able to show Him your face.
27     When you approach Him, He will listen;
        you will make good on your promises to Him.
28     You will pronounce something to be,
        and He will make it so;
        light will break out across all of your paths.
29     God will humble, but you say, “Raise them up.”
        He will save the downcast.
30     He will even consent to deliver those who are not innocent
        through the purity of your then-washed-clean hands.

23 Job confided to his friends.

Job: So once again you are telling me my complaint amounts to rebellion,
        that the heavy hand I feel upon me is smothering my groans?
    Would that I knew where to find Him.
        I would appear before Him.
    I would lay my case out before Him;
        I would fill up my mouth with arguments.
    And then I would finally learn how He would answer me,
        and I would understand what He tells me.
    Would He oppose me merely with His great power? Surely not!
        Surely He would show me the respect of listening to my argument.
    There, in that courtroom, a moral man might hope to reason with Him,
        and I would escape my Judge forever.

    Alas, wherever I go, ahead or behind,
        He is not there;
        I am unable to find Him.
    When He works on either side of me, I still cannot see Him.
        I catch no glimpse of Him.
10     But He knows the course I have traveled.
        And I believe that were He to prove me,
        I would come out purer than gold from the fire.
11     My foot has been securely set in His tracks;
        I have kept to His course of life without swerving;
12     I have not departed from the commands of His lips;
        I have valued everything He says more than all else.
13     He alone is one True God; who can alter Him?
        Whatever He desires within Himself, He does.
14     For He will carry out exactly what He has planned for me,
        and in the future there are more plans to come.
15     Therefore, I am deeply troubled before Him;
        when I ponder it at any length, I am terrified of Him.
16     Yes, God has melted my courage,
        and the Highest One has overwhelmed me with His terror.
17     He could have turned me aside when the darkness came,
        but He did not cut me off.
    Nor does He hide my face from the gloom that has now overtaken me.

2 Peter 1:1-11

Simon Peter, a servant and emissary[a] of Jesus the Anointed One, to those who have received the same precious faith we share through the righteousness of our God and Savior, Jesus the Anointed. I wish you a full measure of grace and peace as you grow in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.

His divine power has given us everything we need to experience life and to reflect God’s true nature through the knowledge of the One who called us by His glory and virtue. Through these things, we have received God’s great and valuable promises, so we might escape the corruption of worldly desires and share in the divine nature.

God took the first step to rescue us from this corrupt world. He has granted us His power, revealed to us true knowledge, and spoken to us great promises. He has done all this for a reason: that we might participate in His own nature and reflect His own life. But we are not passive observers of God’s saving actions. We must receive His grace, grow in knowledge, and join Him in this work of redemption.

To achieve this, you will need to add virtue to your faith, and then knowledge to your virtue; to knowledge, add discipline; to discipline, add endurance; to endurance, add godliness; to godliness, add affection for others as sisters and brothers; and to affection, at last, add love. For if you possess these traits and multiply them, then you will never be ineffective or unproductive in your relationship with our Lord Jesus the Anointed; but if you don’t have these qualities, then you will be nearsighted and blind, forgetting that your past sins have been washed away. 10 Therefore, brothers and sisters, work that much harder to confirm that God has called you and claimed you. If you do this, then you will never fall along the way; 11 and you can be sure that you will be richly welcomed into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus the Anointed, our Liberating King.

The Voice (VOICE)

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.