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Revised Common Lectionary (Semicontinuous)

Daily Bible readings that follow the church liturgical year, with sequential stories told across multiple weeks.
Duration: 1245 days
Good News Translation (GNT)
Version
Song of Solomon 2:8-13

The Second Song

The Woman

I hear my lover's voice.
He comes running over the mountains,
    racing across the hills to me.
My lover is like a gazelle,
    like a young stag.
There he stands beside the wall.
He looks in through the window
    and glances through the lattice.
10 My lover speaks to me.

The Man

Come then, my love;
    my darling, come with me.
11 The winter is over; the rains have stopped;
12     in the countryside the flowers are in bloom.
This is the time for singing;
    the song of doves is heard in the fields.
13 Figs are beginning to ripen;
    the air is fragrant with blossoming vines.
Come then, my love;
    my darling, come with me.

Genesis 29:1-14

Jacob Arrives at Laban's Home

29 Jacob continued on his way and went toward the land of the East. Suddenly he came upon a well out in the fields with three flocks of sheep lying around it. The flocks were watered from this well, which had a large stone over the opening. Whenever all the flocks came together there, the shepherds would roll the stone back and water them. Then they would put the stone back in place.

Jacob asked the shepherds, “My friends, where are you from?”

“From Haran,” they answered.

He asked, “Do you know Laban, grandson of Nahor?”

“Yes, we do,” they answered.

“Is he well?” he asked.

“He is well,” they answered. “Look, here comes his daughter Rachel with his flock.”

Jacob said, “Since it is still broad daylight and not yet time to bring the flocks in, why don't you water them and take them back to pasture?”

They answered, “We can't do that until all the flocks are here and the stone has been rolled back; then we will water the flocks.”

While Jacob was still talking with them, Rachel arrived with the flock. 10 When Jacob saw Rachel with his uncle Laban's flock, he went to the well, rolled the stone back, and watered the sheep. 11 Then he kissed her and began to cry for joy. 12 He told her, “I am your father's relative, the son of Rebecca.”

She ran to tell her father; 13 and when he heard the news about his nephew Jacob, he ran to meet him, hugged him and kissed him, and brought him into the house. When Jacob told Laban everything that had happened, 14 Laban said, “Yes, indeed, you are my own flesh and blood.” Jacob stayed there a whole month.

Romans 3:1-8

Do the Jews then have any advantage over the Gentiles? Or is there any value in being circumcised? Much, indeed, in every way! In the first place, God trusted his message to the Jews. But what if some of them were not faithful? Does this mean that God will not be faithful? (A)Certainly not! God must be true, even though all human beings are liars. As the scripture says,

“You must be shown to be right when you speak;
    you must win your case when you are being tried.”

But what if our doing wrong serves to show up more clearly God's doing right? Can we say that God does wrong when he punishes us? (This would be the natural question to ask.) By no means! If God is not just, how can he judge the world?

But what if my untruth serves God's glory by making his truth stand out more clearly? Why should I still be condemned as a sinner? Why not say, then, “Let us do evil so that good may come”? Some people, indeed, have insulted me by accusing me of saying this very thing! They will be condemned, as they should be.

Good News Translation (GNT)

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