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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
New Century Version (NCV)
Version
Psalm 29

God in the Thunderstorm

A psalm of David.

29 Praise the Lord, you angels;
    praise the Lord’s glory and power.
Praise the Lord for the glory of his name;
    worship the Lord because he is holy.

The Lord’s voice is heard over the sea.
    The glorious God thunders;
    the Lord thunders over the ocean.
The Lord’s voice is powerful;
    the Lord’s voice is majestic.
The Lord’s voice breaks the trees;
    the Lord breaks the cedars of Lebanon.
He makes the land of Lebanon dance like a calf
    and Mount Hermon jump like a baby bull.
The Lord’s voice makes the lightning flash.
The Lord’s voice shakes the desert;
    the Lord shakes the Desert of Kadesh.
The Lord’s voice shakes the oaks
    and strips the leaves off the trees.
In his Temple everyone says, “Glory to God!”

10 The Lord controls the flood.
    The Lord will be King forever.
11 The Lord gives strength to his people;
    the Lord blesses his people with peace.

Isaiah 1:1-4

This is the vision Isaiah son of Amoz saw about what would happen to Judah and Jerusalem. Isaiah saw these things while Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah were kings of Judah.

God’s Case Against His Children

Heaven and earth, listen,
    because the Lord is speaking:
“I raised my children and helped them grow up,
    but they have turned against me.
An ox knows its master,
    and a donkey knows where its owner feeds it,
but the people of Israel do not know me;
    my people do not understand.”

How terrible! Israel is a nation of sin,
    a people loaded down with guilt,
a group of children doing evil,
    children who are full of evil.
They have left the Lord;
    they hate God, the Holy One of Israel,
    and have turned away from him as if he were a stranger.

Isaiah 1:16-20

16 Wash yourselves and make yourselves clean.
    Stop doing the evil things I see you do.
Stop doing wrong.
17 Learn to do good.
Seek justice.
    Punish those who hurt others.
Help the orphans.
    Stand up for the rights of widows.”

18 The Lord says,
    “Come, let us talk about these things.
Though your sins are like scarlet,
    they can be as white as snow.
Though your sins are deep red,
    they can be white like wool.
19 If you become willing and obey me,
    you will eat good crops from the land.
20 But if you refuse to obey and if you turn against me,
    you will be destroyed by your enemies’ swords.”
The Lord himself said these things.

Romans 8:1-8

Be Ruled by the Spirit

So now, those who are in Christ Jesus are not judged guilty.[a] Through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit that brings life made you[b] free from the law that brings sin and death. The law was without power, because the law was made weak by our sinful selves. But God did what the law could not do. He sent his own Son to earth with the same human life that others use for sin. By sending his Son to be an offering for sin, God used a human life to destroy sin. He did this so that we could be the kind of people the law correctly wants us to be. Now we do not live following our sinful selves, but we live following the Spirit.

Those who live following their sinful selves think only about things that their sinful selves want. But those who live following the Spirit are thinking about the things the Spirit wants them to do. If people’s thinking is controlled by the sinful self, there is death. But if their thinking is controlled by the Spirit, there is life and peace. When people’s thinking is controlled by the sinful self, they are against God, because they refuse to obey God’s law and really are not even able to obey God’s law. Those people who are ruled by their sinful selves cannot please God.

New Century Version (NCV)

The Holy Bible, New Century Version®. Copyright © 2005 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.