Print Page Options
Previous Prev Day Next DayNext

Revised Common Lectionary (Complementary)

Daily Bible readings that follow the church liturgical year, with thematically matched Old and New Testament readings.
Duration: 1245 days
Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)
Version
Psalm 107:1-3

Book 5

(Psalms 107-150)

107 Praise the Lord, because he is good!
    His faithful love will last forever!
Everyone the Lord has saved should repeat that word of thanks.
    Praise him, all who have been rescued from the enemy.
He gathered his people together from many different countries.
    He brought them from east and west, north and south.[a]

Psalm 107:23-32

23 Some sailed the sea in ships.
    Their work carried them across the water.
24 They saw what the Lord can do.
    They saw the amazing things he did at sea.
25 He gave the command, and a strong wind began to blow.
    The waves became higher and higher.
26 The waves lifted them high into the sky
    and dropped them into the deep sea.
    The storm was so dangerous that the men lost their courage.
27 They were stumbling and falling like someone who is drunk.
    Their skill as sailors was useless.
28 They were in trouble, so they called to the Lord for help,
    and he saved them from their troubles.
29 He stopped the storm
    and calmed the waves.
30 The sailors were happy that the sea became calm,
    and he led them safely to where they wanted to go.
31 Thank the Lord for his faithful love
    and for the amazing things he does for people.
32 Praise God in the great assembly.
    Praise him when the older leaders meet together.

Job 29:21-30:15

21 “In the past people listened to me.
    They waited quietly for my advice.
22 When I finished speaking, they had nothing more to say.
    My words fell gently on their ears.
23 They waited for my words as they would for rain.
    They drank them in like rain in the springtime.
24 I smiled at them, and they could hardly believe it.
    My smile made them feel better.
25 I was their leader and made decisions about their future.
    I was like a king among his troops, comforting those who were sad.

30 “But now men younger than I make fun of me—
    men whose fathers were too worthless to put with my sheep dogs.
Their fathers are still too weak to be of any use to me.
    All their strength is gone.
They are starving with nothing to eat,
    so they chew on the dry, ruined land.
They pull up salt plants in the desert
    and eat the roots from the broom tree.
They are forced away from other people,
    who shout at them as if they were thieves.
They must live in the dry riverbeds,
    hillside caves, and holes in the ground.
They howl in the bushes
    and huddle together under thornbushes.
They are a bunch of worthless people without names,
    who were forced to leave their country.

“Now their sons sing songs to make fun of me.
    My name has become a bad word to them.
10 They hate me and stay far away from me,
    except when they come to spit in my face!
11 God has taken the string from my bow and made me weak,
    so they feel free to do whatever they want to me.
12 They attack me on my right side.
    They knock my feet out from under me.
    They build ramps to attack and destroy me like a city.
13 They guard the road so that I cannot escape.
    They succeed in destroying me, without help from anyone.
14 They break a hole in the wall and come rushing through it,
    and the crashing rocks fall on me.
15 I am shaking with fear.
    They chased my honor away like dust in the wind.
    My safety disappears like a cloud.

Acts 21:1-16

Paul Goes to Jerusalem

21 After we said goodbye to the elders, we sailed away straight to Cos island. The next day we went to the island of Rhodes, and from there we went to Patara. There we found a ship that was going to the area of Phoenicia. We got on the ship and sailed away.

We sailed near the island of Cyprus. We could see it on the north side, but we did not stop. We sailed to the country of Syria. We stopped at Tyre because the ship needed to unload its cargo there. We found the Lord’s followers there and stayed with them for seven days. They warned Paul not to go to Jerusalem because of what the Spirit had told them. But when our time there was up, we returned to the ship to continue our trip. All the followers, even the women and children, came with us to the seashore. We all knelt down on the beach, prayed, and said goodbye. Then we got on the ship, and the followers went home.

We continued our trip from Tyre and went to the city of Ptolemais. We greeted the believers there and stayed with them one day. The next day we left Ptolemais and went to the city of Caesarea. We went into the home of Philip and stayed with him. He had the work of telling the Good News. He was one of the seven helpers.[a] He had four unmarried daughters who had the gift of prophesying.

10 After we had been there for several days, a prophet named Agabus came from Judea. 11 He came to us and borrowed Paul’s belt. He used it to tie his own hands and feet. He said, “The Holy Spirit tells me, ‘This is how the Jews in Jerusalem will tie up the man who wears this belt.[b] Then they will hand him over to people who don’t know God.’”

12 When we heard this, we and the other followers there begged Paul not to go to Jerusalem. 13 But he said, “Why are you crying and making me feel so sad? I am willing to be put in jail in Jerusalem. I am even ready to die for the name of the Lord Jesus!”

14 We could not persuade him to stay away from Jerusalem. So we stopped begging him and said, “We pray that what the Lord wants will be done.”

15 After this, we got ready and left for Jerusalem. 16 Some of the followers of Jesus from Caesarea went with us. These followers took us to the home of Mnason, a man from Cyprus, who was one of the first people to be a follower of Jesus. They took us to his home so that we could stay with him.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International