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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 22:19-28

19 Lord, don’t leave me!
    You are my strength—hurry and help me!
20 Save me from the sword.
    Save my precious life from these dogs.
21 Rescue me from the lion’s mouth.
    Protect me from the horns of the bulls.[a]

22 I will tell my people about you.
    I will praise you in the great assembly.
23 Praise the Lord, all you who worship him!
    Honor him, you descendants of Jacob!
    Fear and respect him, all you people of Israel!
24 He does not ignore those who need help.
    He does not hate them.
He does not turn away from them.
    He listens when they cry for help.

25 Lord, because of you I offer praise in the great assembly.
    In front of all these worshipers I will do all that I promised.
26 Poor people, come eat and be satisfied.[b]
    You who have come looking for the Lord, praise him!
    May your hearts be happy[c] forever.
27 May those in faraway countries remember the Lord and come back to him.
    May those in distant lands worship him,
28 because the Lord is the King.
    He rules all nations.

Isaiah 57:1-13

Israel Does Not Follow God

57 All the good people are gone,
    and no one even noticed.
The loyal followers were gathered up,
    but no one knows why.

The reason they were gathered up
    is that trouble is coming.
But peace will come too,
    and those who trust him will get to rest in their own beds.

“Come here, you children of witches.
    Your father committed adultery,
    and your mother was unfaithful.
You are children out of control, full of lies.
    You make fun of me.
You make faces
    and stick out your tongue at me.[a]
All you want is to worship false gods
    under every green tree.
You kill children by every stream
    and sacrifice them in the rocky places.
You love to worship the smooth rocks in the rivers.
    You pour wine on them to worship them.
You give sacrifices to them, but those rocks are all you get.
    Do you think this makes me happy?
You make your bed on every hill
    and high mountain.[b]
You go up to those places
    and offer sacrifices.
You hide the things that help you remember me
    behind the doors and doorframes.[c]
You were with me,
    but you got up to go to them.
You spread out your bed
    and gave yourself to them.[d]
You love their beds
    and enjoy looking at their naked bodies.[e]
You use your oils and perfumes
    to look nice for Molech.
You sent your messengers to faraway lands,
    and this will bring you down to the place of death.[f]
10 All of them made you tired,
    but you never gave up.
You found new strength,
    because you enjoyed them.
11 You did not remember me.
    You did not even notice me!
So who were you worrying about?
    Who were you afraid of?
    Why did you lie?
Look, I have been quiet for a long time.
    Is that why you didn’t honor me?
12 I could tell about your ‘good works’ and all the ‘religious’ things you do,
    but that will not help you.
13 When you need help,
    you cry to those false gods that you have gathered around you.
    Let them help you!
But I tell you, the wind will blow them all away.
    A puff of wind will blow them all away.
But the one who depends on me
    will get the land I promised
    and enjoy my holy mountain.[g]

Galatians 3:15-22

The Law and the Promise

15 Brothers and sisters, let me give you an example from everyday life: Think about an agreement that one person makes with another. After that agreement is made official, no one can stop it or add anything to it, and no one can ignore it. 16 God made promises to Abraham and his Descendant.[a] The Scripture does not say, “and to your descendants.” That would mean many people. But it says, “and to your Descendant.” That means only one, and that one is Christ. 17 This is what I mean: The agreement that God gave to Abraham was made official long before the law came. The law came 430 years later. So the law could not take away the agreement and change God’s promise.

18 Can following the law give us the blessing God promised? If we could receive it by following the law, then it would not be God’s promise that brings it to us. But God freely gave his blessings to Abraham through the promise God made.

19 So what was the law for? The law was given to show the wrong things people do. The law would continue until the special Descendant of Abraham came. This is the Descendant mentioned in the promise, which came directly from God. But the law was given through angels, and the angels used Moses as a mediator to give the law to the people. 20 But when God gave the promise, there was no mediator, because a mediator is not needed when there is only one side, and God is one.[b]

The Purpose of the Law of Moses

21 Does this mean that the law works against God’s promises? Of course not. The law was never God’s way of giving new life to people. If it were, then we could be made right with God by following the law. 22 But this is not possible. The Scriptures put the whole world in prison under the control of sin, so that the only way for people to get what God promised would be through faith in[c] Jesus Christ. It is given to those who believe in him.

Easy-to-Read Version (ERV)

Copyright © 2006 by Bible League International