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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
Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)
Version
Psalm 38

A song of David for the day of remembrance.[a]

38 Lord, don’t criticize me when you are angry.
    Don’t discipline me in anger.
You have hurt me.
    You punished me and hurt me deeply.
You punished me severely, so my whole body is sore.
    I sinned, and now all my bones hurt.
My guilt is like a heavy burden.
    I am sinking beneath its weight.
I did a foolish thing,
    and now I have infected sores that stink.
I am bent and bowed down.
    I am depressed all day long.
I am burning with fever,
    and my whole body hurts.
I hurt so much I cannot feel anything.
    My pounding heart makes me scream!
My Lord, you heard my groaning.
    You can hear my sighs.
10 My heart is pounding.
    My strength is gone, and I am going blind.[b]
11 Because of my sickness,
    my friends and neighbors will not visit me;
    my family will not come near me.
12 My enemies say bad things about me.
    They are spreading lies and rumors.
    They talk about me all the time.
13 But I am like a deaf man and cannot hear.
    I am like someone who cannot speak.
14 I am like those who cannot hear what people are saying about them.
    I cannot answer to prove my enemies wrong.
15 Lord, you must defend me.
    Lord my God, you must speak for me.
16 That’s why I prayed, “Don’t let my enemies smile at my pain.
    Full of pride, they will laugh if I stumble and fall.”
17 I know I am guilty of doing wrong.
    I cannot forget my pain.
18 Lord, I told you about the evil I have done.
    I am sorry for my sin.
19 But my enemies are alive and healthy,
    and they have told many lies.
20 I did nothing but good,
    and they paid me back with evil.
I try to do what is right,
    but that only makes them turn against me.
21 Lord, don’t leave me.
    My God, stay close to me.
22 Come quickly and help me.
    My Lord, you are the one who saves me.

Isaiah 30:18-26

God Will Help His People

18 So the Lord is waiting to show his mercy to you. He wants to rise and comfort you. The Lord is the God who does the right thing, so he will bless everyone who waits for his help.

19 You people who live in Jerusalem on Mount Zion will not continue crying. The Lord will hear your crying, and he will comfort you. When he hears you, he will help you.

20 The Lord might give you sorrow and pain like the bread and water you eat every day. But God is your teacher, and he will not continue to hide from you. You will see your teacher with your own eyes. 21 If you wander from the right path, either to the right or to the left, you will hear a voice behind you saying, “You should go this way. Here is the right way.”

22 Then you will take your idols covered with gold and silver and make them unfit to be used again. You will throw them away like filthy rags[a] and say, “Go away!”

23 At that time the Lord will send you rain. You will plant seeds, and the ground will grow food for you. You will have a very large harvest. You will have plenty of food in the fields for your animals. There will be large fields for your sheep. 24 Your cattle and donkeys will have all the food they need. There will be much food. You will have to use shovels and pitchforks to spread all the food[b] for your animals to eat. 25 Every mountain and hill will have streams filled with water. These things will happen after many people are killed and the enemy’s towers are pulled down.

26 At that time the light from the moon will be as bright as the sun, and the light from the sun will be seven times brighter than it is now. One day of sunlight will be like a whole week’s worth. This will happen when the Lord bandages his broken people and heals the hurts from their beatings.

Acts 14:8-18

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.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International