Sun 11 Jan 2026 Sun 11 January 2026 |
Sun 11 Jan 2026 Sun 11 January 2026 |
First Sunday after Epiphany |
|
First Series | |
Epistle | Romans 12:1-5 |
Gospel | Luke 2:41-52 |
Old Testament | Isaiah 61:1-3 |
Second Series | |
Epistle | Ephesians 6:1-4 |
Gospel | Mark 10:13-16 |
Psalms | |
Matins | Psalm 13 |
Vespers | Psalm 86 |
Sunday/Festival | Psalm 145 or Psalm 100 or Psalm 72 or Psalm 50 or Psalm 51 or Psalm 119:1-8 or Psalm 119:9-16 or Psalm 119:33-40 or Psalm 128 or Psalm 27 or Psalm 40 or Psalm 122 |
|
First Sunday after Epiphany |
|
First Series | |
Epistle | |
Romans 12:1-5 | |
Gospel | |
Luke 2:41-52 | |
Old Testament | |
Isaiah 61:1-3 | |
Second Series | |
Epistle | |
Ephesians 6:1-4 | |
Gospel | |
Mark 10:13-16 | |
Psalms | |
Matins | |
Psalm 13 | |
Vespers | |
Psalm 86 | |
Sunday/Festival | |
Psalm 145 or Psalm 100 or Psalm 72 or Psalm 50 or Psalm 51 or Psalm 119:1-8 or Psalm 119:9-16 or Psalm 119:33-40 or Psalm 128 or Psalm 27 or Psalm 40 or Psalm 122 |
|
|
First Sunday after Epiphany |
|
First Series | |
Epistle | Romans 12:1-5 |
Gospel | Luke 2:41-52 |
Old Testament | Isaiah 61:1-3 |
Second Series | |
Epistle | Ephesians 6:1-4 |
Gospel | Mark 10:13-16 |
Psalms | |
Matins | Psalm 13 |
Vespers | Psalm 86 |
Sunday/Festival | Psalm 145 or Psalm 100 or Psalm 72 or Psalm 50 or Psalm 51 or Psalm 119:1-8 or Psalm 119:9-16 or Psalm 119:33-40 or Psalm 128 or Psalm 27 or Psalm 40 or Psalm 122 |
|
The Daily Lectionary of the 2006 Lutheran Service Book provides daily devotional readings that follow the Western Church calendar. Through the course of the year, most of the New Testament and about one third of the Old Testament are covered.
The lectionary begins on Ash Wednesday if you are on a Western calendar, or on the Wednesday following Forgiveness Sunday if you are on an Orthodox calendar.
The Daily Lectionary of the 1982 Lutheran Worship hymnal provides a plan for reading the entire Protestant Bible in one year, including two complete readings of the Psalms. Each day's reading includes a Psalm and about three chapters from another book.
The lectionary begins on December 1, which approximately coincides with the Western liturgical new year. If you are using an Orthodox "old" calendar, dates are adjusted accordingly.
This reading plan is circulated widely among Orthodox congregations, and covers the Bible in one year, including the Anagignoskomena, or deuterocanonical texts, found in the Septuagint.
The lectionary begins on the Orthodox new year, September 1. If you are using an Orthodox "old" calendar, then it is adjusted accordingly.
A couple points to mention about this reading plan: