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
International Children’s Bible (ICB)
Version
Psalm 23

The Lord the Shepherd

A song of David.

23 The Lord is my shepherd.
    I have everything I need.
He gives me rest in green pastures.
    He leads me to calm water.
He gives me new strength.
For the good of his name,
    he leads me on paths that are right.
Even if I walk
    through a very dark valley,
I will not be afraid
    because you are with me.
Your rod and your shepherd’s staff comfort me.

You prepare a meal for me
    in front of my enemies.
You pour oil of blessing on my head.[a]
    You give me more than I can hold.
Surely your goodness and love will be with me
    all my life.
And I will live in the house of the Lord forever.

Jeremiah 10:17-25

Destruction Is Coming

17 Get everything you own and prepare to leave.
    You people of Judah are trapped in the city by your enemies.
18 This is what the Lord says:
    “At this time I will throw out the people of Judah who live in this land.
I will bring pain and trouble to them.
    And they will really feel it.”

19 How terrible it will be for me because of my injury.
    I am injured and cannot be healed.
Yet I told myself,
    “This is my sickness; I must suffer through it.”
20 My tent is ruined.
    All its ropes are broken.
My children have gone away and left me.
    No one is left to put up my tent.
    No one is left to set up a shelter for me.
21 The shepherds are stupid.
    They don’t ask the Lord.
So they do not have success.
    Their flocks are scattered and lost.
22 Listen! The news is coming.
    The loud noise is coming from the north.
It will make the towns of Judah an empty desert.
    They will become a home for wild dogs!

Jeremiah’s Prayer

23 Lord, I know that a person’s life doesn’t really belong to him.
    No one can control his own life.
24 Lord, correct me, but be fair.
    Don’t punish me in anger.
    If you do, you will destroy me.
25 Pour out your anger on other nations.
    They do not know you.
    They do not pray to you.
Those nations have destroyed Jacob’s family.
    They have eaten him up.
    They destroyed his homeland.

Acts 17:16-31

Paul in Athens

16 Paul was waiting for Silas and Timothy in Athens. He was troubled because he saw that the city was full of idols. 17 In the synagogue, he talked with the Jews and the Greeks who worshiped the true God. He also talked every day with people in the marketplace.

18 Some of the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers[a] argued with him. Some of them said, “This man doesn’t know what he is talking about. What is he trying to say?” Paul was telling them the Good News of Jesus’ rising from death. They said, “He seems to be telling us about some other gods.” 19 They got Paul and took him to a meeting of the Areopagus.[b] They said, “Please explain to us this new idea that you have been teaching. 20 The things you are saying are new to us. We want to know what this teaching means.” 21 (All the people of Athens and those from other countries always used their time talking about all the newest ideas.)

22 Then Paul stood before the meeting of the Areopagus. He said, “Men of Athens, I can see that you are very religious in all things. 23 I was going through your city, and I saw the things you worship. I found an altar that had these words written on it: “TO A GOD WHO IS NOT KNOWN.” You worship a god that you don’t know. This is the God I am telling you about! 24 He is the God who made the whole world and everything in it. He is the Lord of the land and the sky. He does not live in temples that men build! 25 This God is the One who gives life, breath, and everything else to people. He does not need any help from them. He has everything he needs. 26 God began by making one man. From him came all the different people who live everywhere in the world. He decided exactly when and where they must live. 27 God wanted them to look for him and perhaps search all around for him and find him. But he is not far from any of us: 28 ‘By his power we live and move and exist.’ Some of your own poets have said: ‘For we are his children.’ 29 We are God’s children. So, you must not think that God is like something that people imagine or make. He is not like gold, silver, or rock. 30 In the past, people did not understand God, but God ignored this. But now, God tells everyone in the world to change his heart and life. 31 God has decided on a day that he will judge all the world. He will be fair. He will use a man to do this. God chose that man long ago. And God has proved this to everyone by raising that man from death!”

International Children’s Bible (ICB)

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