Enter a passage (e.g. Jn 3:16), or word (e.g. salvation) that you want to find.
Language:  English (US)  Version: 
Begin in   end in 
Through the Bible in a Year 
Date:
Reading Plan:



New Living Translation

<< View Previous      View Next >>
Audio includes entire chapter and will
start at the beginning of the chapter.
Please skip forward to today's passage
if necessary.

Old Testament:  Job 3-4

Job 3

Job's First Speech
 1  At last Job spoke, and he cursed the day of his birth.  2  He said:

 3  "Let the day of my birth be erased,
  and the night I was conceived.
 4  Let that day be turned to darkness.
  Let it be lost even to God on high,
  and let no light shine on it.
 5  Let the darkness and utter gloom claim that day for its own.
  Let a black cloud overshadow it,
  and let the darkness terrify it.
 6  Let that night be blotted off the calendar,
  never again to be counted among the days of the year,
  never again to appear among the months.
 7  Let that night be childless.
  Let it have no joy.
 8  Let those who are experts at cursing—
  whose cursing could rouse Leviathan [8] —
  curse that day.
 9  Let its morning stars remain dark.
  Let it hope for light, but in vain;
  may it never see the morning light.
 10  Curse that day for failing to shut my mother's womb,
  for letting me be born to see all this trouble.

 11  "Why wasn't I born dead?
  Why didn't I die as I came from the womb?
 12  Why was I laid on my mother's lap?
  Why did she nurse me at her breasts?
 13  Had I died at birth, I would now be at peace.
  I would be asleep and at rest.
 14  I would rest with the world's kings and prime ministers,
  whose great buildings now lie in ruins.
 15  I would rest with princes, rich in gold,
  whose palaces were filled with silver.
 16  Why wasn't I buried like a stillborn child,
  like a baby who never lives to see the light?
 17  For in death the wicked cause no trouble,
  and the weary are at rest.
 18  Even captives are at ease in death,
  with no guards to curse them.
 19  Rich and poor are both there,
  and the slave is free from his master.

 20  "Oh, why give light to those in misery,
  and life to those who are bitter?
 21  They long for death, and it won't come.
  They search for death more eagerly than for hidden treasure.
 22  They're filled with joy when they finally die,
  and rejoice when they find the grave.
 23  Why is life given to those with no future,
  those God has surrounded with difficulties?
 24  I cannot eat for sighing;
  my groans pour out like water.
 25  What I always feared has happened to me.
  What I dreaded has come true.
 26  I have no peace, no quietness.
  I have no rest; only trouble comes."

Job 4

Eliphaz's First Response to Job
 1  Then Eliphaz the Temanite replied to Job:

 2  "Will you be patient and let me say a word?
  For who could keep from speaking out?

 3  "In the past you have encouraged many people;
  you have strengthened those who were weak.
 4  Your words have supported those who were falling;
  you encouraged those with shaky knees.
 5  But now when trouble strikes, you lose heart.
  You are terrified when it touches you.
 6  "Doesn't your reverence for God give you confidence? Doesn't your life of integrity give you hope?"  7  "Stop and think! Do the innocent die?
  When have the upright been destroyed?
 8  My experience shows that those who plant trouble
  and cultivate evil will harvest the same.
 9  A breath from God destroys them.
  They vanish in a blast of his anger.
 10  The lion roars and the wildcat snarls,
  but the teeth of strong lions will be broken.
 11  The fierce lion will starve for lack of prey,
  and the cubs of the lioness will be scattered.

 12  "This truth was given to me in secret,
  as though whispered in my ear.
 13  It came to me in a disturbing vision at night,
  when people are in a deep sleep.
 14  Fear gripped me,
  and my bones trembled.
 15  A spirit [15]  swept past my face,
  and my hair stood on end. [15] 
 16  The spirit stopped, but I couldn't see its shape.
  There was a form before my eyes.
In the silence I heard a voice say,
 17  `Can a mortal be innocent before God?
  Can anyone be pure before the Creator?'

 18  "If God does not trust his own angels
  and has charged his messengers with foolishness,
 19  how much less will he trust people made of clay!
  They are made of dust, crushed as easily as a moth.
 20  They are alive in the morning but dead by evening,
  gone forever without a trace.
 21  Their tent-cords are pulled and the tent collapses,
  and they die in ignorance.
<<  3:8 The identification of Leviathan is disputed, ranging from an earthly creature to a mythical sea monster in ancient literature.
<<  4:15a Or wind; also in 4:16. 4:15b Or its wind sent shivers up my spine.

New Testament:  Acts 7:44-60

Acts 7 : 44-60

   44  "Our ancestors carried the Tabernacle [44]  with them through the wilderness. It was constructed according to the plan God had shown to Moses.  45  Years later, when Joshua led our ancestors in battle against the nations that God drove out of this land, the Tabernacle was taken with them into their new territory. And it stayed there until the time of King David.
   46  "David found favor with God and asked for the privilege of building a permanent Temple for the God of Jacob. [46]   47  But it was Solomon who actually built it.  48  However, the Most High doesn't live in temples made by human hands. As the prophet says,

 49  `Heaven is my throne,
  and the earth is my footstool.
Could you build me a temple as good as that?'
  asks the LORD.
`Could you build me such a resting place?
 50  "Didn't my hands make both heaven and earth?"    51  "You stubborn people! You are heathen [51]  at heart and deaf to the truth. Must you forever resist the Holy Spirit? That's what your ancestors did, and so do you!  52  Name one prophet your ancestors didn't persecute! They even killed the ones who predicted the coming of the Righteous One—the Messiah whom you betrayed and murdered.  53  You deliberately disobeyed God's law, even though you received it from the hands of angels."
   54  The Jewish leaders were infuriated by Stephen's accusation, and they shook their fists at him in rage. [54]   55  But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, gazed steadily into heaven and saw the glory of God, and he saw Jesus standing in the place of honor at God's right hand.  56  And he told them, "Look, I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing in the place of honor at God's right hand!"
   57  Then they put their hands over their ears and began shouting. They rushed at him  58  and dragged him out of the city and began to stone him. His accusers took off their coats and laid them at the feet of a young man named Saul. [58] 
   59  As they stoned him, Stephen prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit."  60  He fell to his knees, shouting, "Lord, don't charge them with this sin!" And with that, he died.
<<  7:44 Greek the tent of witness.
<<  7:46 Some manuscripts read the house of Jacob.
<<  7:49-50 Isa 66:1-2.
<<  7:51 Greek uncircumcised.
<<  7:54 Greek they were grinding their teeth against him.
<<  7:58 Saul is later called Paul; see 13:9.

Send to a Friend

Please fill out your email address and the email address or addresses separated by commas of the friend(s) you wish to send this passage to.
From:
To:
Message:
You have typed 0 of a maximum 250 characters.
Send Passage      Cancel

Log in or create an account to post a comment.  

Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright © 1996, 2004 by Tyndale Charitable Trust. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Wheaton Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

New Living, NLT, and the New Living Translation logo are registered trademarks of Tyndale House Publishers.