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The Revised Common Lectionary is a three-year cycle of readings that begins with Advent. For each Sunday and festival, three readings and are appointed: a Gospel, an Old Testament reading, a New Testament reading. A Psalm is appointed to be sung in response to the Old Testament reading.
Developed by the Consultation on Common Texts, an ecumenical group of liturgical scholars and denominational representatives from the U.S. and Canada, the lectionary is shared by many North American churches.
Each year centers on one synoptic Gospel (Matthew, Mark or Luke). The Gospel of John appears in all three years and more often in Year B.
Seasons such as Advent, Christmas, Lent and Easter number Sundays sequentially (e.g., “First Sunday of Advent”). In the time after Epiphany and time after Pentecost, Sundays are assigned by calendar ranges (e.g., “Sunday, June 5–11”) and numbered from “Lectionary 1” through “Lectionary 34.” See more lectionary resources here.
Daily readings accompany the cycle, offering a psalm and two scriptures for each day between Sundays. Thursday–Saturday readings prepare for Sunday’s texts; Monday–Wednesday readings reflect on them. From each week’s set, local selections may be made. The complete Daily Lectionary appears in Evangelical Lutheran Worship, pp. 1121–1153.