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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
International Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Psalm 32

It Is Better to Confess Sin

A maskil of David.

32 Happy is the person
    whose sins are forgiven,
    whose wrongs are pardoned.
Happy is the person
    whom the Lord does not consider guilty.
    In that person there is nothing false.

When I kept things to myself,
    I felt weak deep inside me.
    I moaned all day long.
Day and night
    you punished me.
My strength was gone
    as in the summer heat. Selah
Then I confessed my sins to you.
    I didn’t hide my guilt.
I said, “I will confess my sins to the Lord.”
    And you forgave my guilt. Selah

For this reason, all who obey you
    should pray to you while they still can.
When troubles rise like a flood,
    they will not reach them.
You are my hiding place.
    You protect me from my troubles.
    You fill me with songs of salvation. Selah

The Lord says, “I will make you wise. I will show you where to go.
    I will guide you and watch over you.
So don’t be like a horse or donkey.
    They don’t understand.
They must be led with bits and reins,
    or they will not come near you.”

10 Wicked people have many troubles.
    But the Lord’s love surrounds those who trust him.
11 Good people, rejoice and be happy in the Lord.
    All you whose hearts are right, sing.

2 Samuel 15:1-12

Absalom Plans to Take David’s Kingdom

15 After this, Absalom got a chariot and horses for himself. He got 50 men to run before him. Absalom would get up early and stand near the city gate.[a] If anyone had a problem he wanted the king to settle, he would come here. When he came, Absalom would call to the man. Absalom would say, “What city are you from?”

The man would answer, “I’m from one of the tribes of Israel.”

Then Absalom would say to him, “Look, your claims are right. But the king has no one to listen to you.” Absalom would also say, “I wish someone would make me judge in this land! Then I could help everyone who comes with a problem. I could help him get a fair decision for his problem!”

People would come near Absalom to bow to him. When they did, Absalom would reach out his hand and take hold of them. Then he would kiss them. Absalom did that to all the Israelites who came to King David for decisions. In this way, Absalom won the hearts of all Israel.

After four years Absalom said to King David, “Please let me go to Hebron. I want to carry out my promise that I made to the Lord. I made it while I was living in Geshur in Aram. I said, ‘If the Lord takes me back to Jerusalem, I will worship him in Hebron.’”

The king said, “Go in peace.”

So Absalom went to Hebron. 10 But he sent secret messengers through all the tribes of Israel. They told the people, “When you hear the trumpets, say this: ‘Absalom has become the king at Hebron!’”

11 Absalom had invited 200 men to go with him. So they went from Jerusalem with him. But they didn’t know what he was planning. 12 Ahithophel was one of the people who advised David. He was from the town of Giloh. While Absalom was offering sacrifices, he called Ahithophel to come from his hometown of Giloh. So Absalom’s plans were working very well. More and more people began to support him.

Romans 11:1-10

God Shows Mercy to All People

11 So I ask: Did God throw out his people? No! I myself am an Israelite. I am from the family of Abraham, from the tribe of Benjamin. God chose the Israelites to be his people before they were born. And God did not leave his people. Surely you know what the Scripture says about Elijah, how he prayed to God against the people of Israel. Elijah said, “They have killed your prophets, and they have destroyed your altars. I am the only prophet left. And now they are trying to kill me, too.”[a] But what answer did God give Elijah? He said, “But I have left 7,000 people in Israel. Those 7,000 have never bowed down before Baal.”[b] It is the same now. There are a few people that God has chosen by his grace. And if God chose them by grace, then it is not for the things they have done. If they could be made God’s people by what they did, then God’s gift of grace would not really be a gift.

So this is what has happened: The people of Israel tried to be right with God. But they did not succeed. But the ones God chose did become right with him. The others became hard and refused to listen to God. As it is written in the Scriptures:

“God gave the people a dull mind so they could not understand.” Isaiah 29:10
“God closed their eyes so they could not see,
    and God closed their ears so they could not hear.
    This continues until today.” Deuteronomy 29:4

And David says:

“Let their own feasts trap them and cause their ruin.
    Let their feasts cause them to sin and be paid back.
10 Let their eyes be closed so they cannot see.
    Let their backs be forever weak from troubles.” Psalm 69:22-23

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

The Holy Bible, International Children’s Bible® Copyright© 1986, 1988, 1999, 2015 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission.