Weekly Bible Verses (3/14-3/20)

Isaiah 55: 1-9

 All of you who are thirsty, come to the water!

Whoever has no money, come, buy food and eat!

Without money, at no cost, buy wine and milk!

Why spend money for what isn’t food,

    and your earnings for what doesn’t satisfy?

Listen carefully to me and eat what is good;

    enjoy the richest of feasts.

Listen and come to me;

    listen, and you will live.

I will make an everlasting covenant with you,

    my faithful loyalty to David.

Look, I made him a witness to the peoples,

    a prince and commander of peoples.

Look, you will call a nation you don’t know,

    a nation you don’t know will run to you

    because of the Lord your God,

    the holy one of Israel, who has glorified you.

Seek the Lord when he can still be found;

    call him while he is yet near.

Let the wicked abandon their ways

    and the sinful their schemes.

Let them return to the Lord so that he may have mercy on them,

    to our God, because he is generous with forgiveness.

My plans aren’t your plans,

nor are your ways my ways, says the Lord.

Just as the heavens are higher than the earth,

    so are my ways higher than your ways,

    and my plans than your plans.

Luke 13: 1-9

Some who were present on that occasion told Jesus about the Galileans whom Pilate had killed while they were offering sacrifices. He replied, “Do you think the suffering of these Galileans proves that they were more sinful than all the other Galileans? No, I tell you, but unless you change your hearts and lives, you will die just as they did. What about those eighteen people who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them? Do you think that they were more guilty of wrongdoing than everyone else who lives in Jerusalem? No, I tell you, but unless you change your hearts and lives, you will die just as they did.”

Jesus told this parable: “A man owned a fig tree planted in his vineyard. He came looking for fruit on it and found none. He said to his gardener, ‘Look, I’ve come looking for fruit on this fig tree for the past three years, and I’ve never found any. Cut it down! Why should it continue depleting the soil’s nutrients?’ The gardener responded, ‘Lord, give it one more year, and I will dig around it and give it fertilizer. Maybe it will produce fruit next year; if not, then you can cut it down.’”